Publications of Martin Wikelski
All genres
Journal Article (345)
301.
Journal Article
2 (7), pp. 924 - 936 (2004)
Migratory sleeplessness in the white-crowned sparrow (Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelii). PLoS Biology 302.
Journal Article
9 (1), 5 (2004)
Galapagos birds and diseases: Invasive pathogens as threats for island species. Ecology and Society 303.
Journal Article
11 (4), pp. 190 - 197 (2004)
Conservation of Galapagos marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus). Iguana 304.
Journal Article
270 (1511), pp. 153 - 158 (2003)
Immune activity elevates energy expenditure of house sparrows: A link between direct and indirect costs? Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 305.
Journal Article
84 (11), pp. 3013 - 3023 (2003)
Seasonal changes in food quality: A proximate cue for reproductive timing in marine iguanas. Ecology 306.
Journal Article
133 (3), pp. 297 - 304 (2003)
Diel changes in plasma melatonin and corticosterone concentrations in tropical Nazca boobies (Sula granti) in relation to moon phase and age. General and Comparative Endocrinology 307.
Journal Article
43 (3), pp. 402 - 407 (2003)
Correlation between plasma steroids and chick visits by nonbreeding adult Nazca boobies. Hormones and Behavior 308.
Journal Article
105 (4), pp. 683 - 695 (2003)
Reproductive seasonality of seven neotropical passerine species. The Condor 309.
Journal Article
43 (3), pp. 376 - 386 (2003)
Body size, performance and fitness in Galapagos marine iguanas. Integrative and Comparative Biology 310.
Journal Article
270 (1531), pp. 2383 - 2388 (2003)
Slow pace of life in tropical sedentary birds: A common-garden experiment on four stonechat populations from different latitudes. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 311.
Journal Article
423 (6941), p. 704 - 704 (2003)
Avian metabolism: Costs of migration in free-flying songbirds. Nature 312.
Journal Article
132 (2), pp. 216 - 222 (2003)
Effect of tidal cycle and food intake on the baseline plasma corticosterone rhythm in intertidally foraging marine iguanas. General and Comparative Endocrinology 313.
Journal Article
104 (2), pp. 387 - 394 (2002)
Vocal distinctiveness and response to conspecific playback in the spotted antbird. The Condor 314.
Journal Article
205 (13), pp. 1917 - 1924 (2002)
The relationship between heart rate and rate of oxygen consumption in Galapagos marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus) at two different temperatures. The Journal of Experimental Biology 315.
Journal Article
51 (6), pp. 579 - 587 (2002)
Territory establishment in lekking marine iguanas, Amblyrhynchus cristatus: Support for the hotshot mechanism. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 316.
Journal Article
17 (10), pp. 462 - 468 (2002)
The physiology/life-history nexus. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 317.
Journal Article
7 (5-6), pp. 309 - 313 (2002)
Severe effects of low-level oil contamination on wildlife predicted by the corticosterone-stress response: Preliminary data and a research agenda. Spill Science & Technology Bulletin 318.
Journal Article
108 (3), pp. 371 - 374 (2002)
Exposure to tourism reduces stress-induced corticosterone levels in Galapagos marine iguanas. Biological Conservation 319.
Journal Article
417 (6889), pp. 607 - 608 (2002)
Galapagos islands: Marine iguanas die from trace oil pollution. Nature 320.
Journal Article
Darwin’s finches. eLS (2001)
321.
Journal Article
98 (13), pp. 7366 - 7370 (2001)
Corticosterone levels predict survival probabilities of Galapagos marine iguanas during El Nino events. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 322.
Journal Article
40 (1), pp. 14 - 20 (2001)
Hormonal correlates of siblicide in Galapagos Nazca boobies. Hormones and Behavior 323.
Journal Article
107 (7), pp. 623 - 638 (2001)
Why is female choice not unanimous? Insights from costly mate sampling in marine iguanas. Ethology 324.
Journal Article
16 (9), pp. 479 - 481 (2001)
The physiology of life histories. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 325.
Journal Article
292 (5516), pp. 437 - 438 (2001)
Marine iguanas oiled in the Galapagos. Science 326.
Journal Article
117 (1), pp. 20 - 33 (2000)
Testosterone and year-round territoriality in a tropical bird. General and Comparative Endocrinology 327.
Journal Article
286 (5), pp. 494 - 504 (2000)
Visual and nutritional food cues fine-tune timing of reproduction in a neotropical rainforest bird. Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A - Ecological Genetics and Physiology 328.
Journal Article
81 (9), pp. 2458 - 2472 (2000)
Seasonality of reproduction in a neotropical rain forest bird. Ecology 329.
Journal Article
403 (6765), pp. 37 - 38 (2000)
Marine iguanas shrink to survive El Nino. Changes in bone metabolism enable these adult lizards to reversibly alter their length. Nature 330.
Journal Article
124 (1), pp. 107 - 115 (2000)
Niche expansion, body size, and survival in Galapagos marine iguanas. Oecologia 331.
Journal Article
40 (6), p. 1266 - 1266 (2000)
Daily rhythm of basal corticosterone levels is not synchronized with feeding activity in marine iguanas. American Zoologist 332.
Journal Article
13 (4), pp. 493 - 499 (1999)
Effects of foraging mode and season on the energetics of the Marine Iguana, Amblyrhynchus cristatus. Functional Ecology 333.
Journal Article
10 (1), pp. 22 - 29 (1999)
Influences of parasites and thermoregulation on grouping tendencies in marine iguanas. Behavioral Ecology 334.
Journal Article
266 (1419), pp. 551 - 556 (1999)
Social instability increases testosterone year-round in a tropical bird. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 335.
Journal Article
185 (5), pp. 463 - 470 (1999)
Energy metabolism, testosterone and corticosterone in white-crowned sparrows. Journal of Comparative Physiology A-Neuroethology Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology 336.
Journal Article
265 (1391), pp. 89 - 95 (1998)
A neotropical forest bird can measure the slight changes in tropical photoperiod. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 337.
Journal Article
78 (7), pp. 2204 - 2217 (1997)
Energy limits to body size in a grazing reptile, the Galapagos marine iguana. Ecology 338.
Journal Article
51 (3), pp. 922 - 936 (1997)
Body size and sexual size dimorphism in marine iguanas fluctuate as a result of opposing natural and sexual selection: An island comparison. Evolution: International journal of organic evolution 339.
Journal Article
263 (1369), pp. 439 - 444 (1996)
Pre-copulatory ejaculation solves time constraints during copulations in marine iguanas. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 340.
Journal Article
52 (3), pp. 581 - 596 (1996)
Lekking in marine iguanas: Female grouping and male reproductive strategies. Animal Behaviour 341.
Journal Article
44, pp. 30 - 36 (1995)
Evolution der Körpergröße bei der Galapagos-Meerechse. Praxis der Naturwissenschaften - Biologie 342.
Journal Article
10, pp. 335 - 350 (1995)
Is there an endogenous tidal foraging rhythm in marine iguanas? Journal of Biological Rhythms 343.
Journal Article
128 (3), pp. 255 - 279 (1994)
Foraging strategies of the galapagos marine iguana (Amblyrhynchus Cristatus): Adapting behavioral rules to ontogenic size change. Behaviour 344.
Journal Article
94 (3), pp. 373 - 379 (1993)
Ontogenic changes in food-intake and digestion rate of the herbivorous marine iguana (amblyrhynchus-cristatus, Bell). Oecologia 345.
Journal Article
56 (2), pp. 178 - 179 (1988)
The first record of the yellow-browed warbler phylloscopus-inornatus. New record for Algeria. Alauda Book Chapter (15)
346.
Book Chapter
Movement ecology. In: Galapagos Giant Tortoises, pp. 261 - 279 (Eds. Gibbs, J.P.; Cayot, L.J.; Tapia Aguilera, W.). Academic Press (2021)
347.
Book Chapter
Track annotation: Determining the environmental context of movement through the air. In: Aeroecology, pp. 71 - 86 (Eds. Chilson, P. B.; Frick, W. F.; Kelly, J. F.; Liechti, F.). Springer International Publishing AG, Cham, Schweiz (2017)
348.
Book Chapter
46, pp. 11 - 28 (Ed. Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften). Dr. Friedrich Pfeil, München (2017)
Neue Daten zu den Wanderungen europäischer Tiere. In: Tierwelt im Wandel - Wanderung, Zuwanderung, Rückgang, Vol. 349.
Book Chapter
Why do sloths poop on the ground? In: Treetops at risk. Challenges of global canopy ecology and conservation, pp. 195 - 199 (Eds. Lowman, M.; Devy, S.; Ganesh, T.). Springer-Verlag, New York (2013)
350.
Book Chapter
Mechanistic principles of locomotion performance in migrating animals. In: Animal migration: A synthesis, pp. 35 - 51 (Eds. Milner-Gulland, E. J.; Fryxell, J. M.; Sinclair, A. R. E.). Oxford University Press, Oxford (2011)