Publications of Ulrich Knief
All genres
Journal Article (14)
Journal Article
10 (23), pp. 13464 - 13475 (2020)
A test for meiotic drive in hybrids between Australian and Timor zebra finches. Ecology and Evolution
Journal Article
166, pp. 183 - 191 (2020)
Social interactions and interaction partners in infant orang-utans of two wild populations. Animal Behaviour
Journal Article
7 (1), coz056 (2019)
Traffic noise exposure depresses plasma corticosterone and delays offspring growth in breeding zebra finches. Conservation Physiology
Journal Article
1 (8), pp. 1177 - 1184 (2017)
A sex-chromosome inversion causes strong overdominance for sperm traits that affect siring success. Nature Ecology & Evolution
Journal Article
30 (5), pp. 968 - 976 (2017)
Testing the phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis in the presence and absence of inbreeding. Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Journal Article
118 (3), pp. 239 - 248 (2017)
Meiotic recombination shapes precision of pedigree- and marker-based estimates of inbreeding. Heredity
Journal Article
26 (5), pp. 1285 - 1305 (2017)
Association mapping of morphological traits in wild and captive zebra finches: Reliable within, but not between populations. Molecular Ecology
Journal Article
125 (4), pp. 757 - 768 (2016)
Mapping centromeres of microchromosomes in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) using half-tetrad analysis. Chromosoma: Biology of the Nucleus
Journal Article
31 (4), pp. 315 - 326 (2016)
The ecology and evolutionary dynamics of meiotic drive. Trends in Ecology and Evolution
Journal Article
17, 199 (2016)
Fitness consequences of polymorphic inversions in the zebra finch genome. Genome Biology
Journal Article
24 (15), pp. 3846 - 3859 (2015)
A prezygotic transmission distorter acting equally in female and male zebra finches Taeniopygia guttata. Molecular Ecology
Journal Article
114 (4), pp. 397 - 403 (2015)
Quantifying realized inbreeding in wild and captive animal populations. Heredity
Journal Article
156 (2), pp. 472 - 477 (2014)
Triploid ZZZ zebra finches Taeniopygia guttata exhibit abnormal sperm heads and poor reproductive performance. Ibis
Journal Article
21 (15), pp. 3704 - 3717 (2012)
QTL and quantitative genetic analysis of beak morphology reveals patterns of standing genetic variation in an Estrildid finch. Molecular Ecology