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- Journal Article
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- open access
Post-fragmentation population structure in a cooperative breeding Afrotropical cloud forest bird: emergence of a source-sink population network
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
A stochastic movement simulator improves estimates of landscape connectivity
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Feather development under environmental stress: lead exposure effects on growth patterns in Great Tits Parus major
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Modelling forest connectivity for critically-endangered bird species: A case study in the Taita Hills, Kenya
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Genetic equilibrium despite habitat fragmentation in an Afrotropical bird
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Patterns of roost use by bats in a neotropical savanna: implications for conservation
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Consistency and variation in the bat assemblages inhabiting two forest islands within a neotropical savanna in Bolivia
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Fluctuating asymmetry as an early warning system in the critically endangered Taita thrush.
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Fluctuating asymmetry as an indicator of fitness: can we bridge the gap between studies?
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Avian persistence in fragmented rainforest.
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Developmental instability in relation to stress and fitness in birds and moths studied by the laboratory of animal ecology of the university of Antwerp
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The use of bilateral asymmetry in ecology and conservation: Concept, developments & prospects
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Genetic variability and gene flow in the globally, critically-endangered Taita Thrush
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Developmental instability and inbreeding in natural bird populations exposed to different levels of habitat disturbance
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Dispersal studies in recently and historically fragmented forests - a comparison between Kenya and Belgium
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Fluctuating asymmetry increases with habitat disturbance in seven bird species of a fragmented afrotropical forest
(1999) PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES. 266(1425). p.1241-1246 -
Stabilizing selection on blue tit fledgling mass in the presence of sparrowhawks
(1998) PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES. 265(1400). p.1011-1016 -
DIVERSE EFFECTS OF FOREST FRAGMENTATION ON A NUMBER OF ANIMAL SPECIES