Publications of Lotte Schlicht
All genres
Journal Article (14)
Journal Article
198, pp. 21 - 31 (2023)
Start and end of daily activity predict extrapair siring success independently of age in male blue tits. Animal Behaviour
Journal Article
21, 55 (2021)
Phenology-mediated effects of phenotype on the probability of social polygyny and its fitness consequences in a migratory passerine. BMC Ecology and Evolution
Journal Article
181, pp. 61 - 69 (2021)
Effects of exposure to predator models on fledging behaviour in blue tits. Animal Behaviour
Journal Article
174, pp. 79 - 86 (2021)
Why do nestling birds fledge early in the day? Animal Behaviour
Journal Article
180, pp. 143 - 150 (2021)
Experimental evidence that nestlings adjust their fledging time to each other in a multiparous bird. Animal Behaviour
Journal Article
31 (2), pp. 598 - 609 (2020)
Socio-ecological factors shape the opportunity for polygyny in a migratory songbird. Behavioral Ecology
Journal Article
162 (4), pp. 1146 - 1162 (2020)
The effects of season, sex, age and weather on population‐level variation in the timing of activity in Eurasian Blue Tits Cyanistes caeruleus. Ibis
Journal Article
123, pp. 117 - 127 (2017)
Blue tits do not return faster to the nest in response to either short- or long-term begging playbacks. Animal Behaviour
Journal Article
104 (2), pp. 107 - 117 (2016)
Courtship calls in blue tits Cyanistes caeruleus: Daily and seasonal occurrence and link to paternity. Ardea
Journal Article
84 (2), pp. 518 - 531 (2015)
Spatial patterns of extra-pair paternity: Beyond paternity gains and losses. Journal of Animal Ecology
Journal Article
26 (5), pp. 1404 - 1413 (2015)
Male extraterritorial behavior predicts extrapair paternity pattern in blue tits, Cyanistes caeruleus. Behavioral Ecology
Journal Article
156 (1), pp. 215 - 219 (2014)
Thiessen polygons as a model for animal territory estimation. Ibis
Journal Article
25 (3), pp. 650 - 659 (2014)
No relationship between female emergence time from the roosting place and extrapair paternity. Behavioral Ecology
Journal Article
83 (6), pp. 1335 - 1343 (2012)
Male extrapair nestlings fledge first. Animal Behaviour