Schlicht, L.; Santema, P.; Kempenaers, B.: Start and end of daily activity predict extrapair siring success independently of age in male blue tits. Animal Behaviour 198, pp. 21 - 31 (2023)
Canal, D.; Schlicht, L.; Santoro, S.; Camacho, C.; Martínez-Padilla, J.; Potti, J.: Phenology-mediated effects of phenotype on the probability of social polygyny and its fitness consequences in a migratory passerine. BMC Ecology and Evolution 21, 55 (2021)
Santema, P.; Schlicht, L.; Sheldon, B. C.; Kempenaers, B.: Experimental evidence that nestlings adjust their fledging time to each other in a multiparous bird. Animal Behaviour 180, pp. 143 - 150 (2021)
Schlicht, L.; Kempenaers, B.: The effects of season, sex, age and weather on population‐level variation in the timing of activity in Eurasian Blue Tits Cyanistes caeruleus. Ibis 162 (4), pp. 1146 - 1162 (2020)
Santema, P.; Schlicht, E.; Schlicht, L.; Kempenaers, B.: Blue tits do not return faster to the nest in response to either short- or long-term begging playbacks. Animal Behaviour 123, pp. 117 - 127 (2017)
Schlicht, L.; Kempenaers, B.: Courtship calls in blue tits Cyanistes caeruleus: Daily and seasonal occurrence and link to paternity. Ardea 104 (2), pp. 107 - 117 (2016)
Why do primates have big brains? In the Panamanian rainforest, scientists pitted large-brained primates against smaller-brained mammals to find out who was the smartest forager
The first narrative nonfiction book about the pioneering animal tracking project ICARUS, written by its founder Martin Wikelski, is published by Greystone Books