Lobato, M.; Vellema, M.; Gahr, C.; Leitao, A.; de Lima, S.; Geberzahn, N.; Gahr, M.: Mismatch in sexual dimorphism of developing song and song control system in blue-capped cordon-bleus, a songbird species with singing females and males. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 3, 117 (2015)
Geberzahn, N.; Gahr, M.: Song learning in male and female Uraeginthus cyanocephalus, a tropical songbird species. Journal of Comparative Psychology 127 (4), pp. 352 - 364 (2013)
Nemeth, E.; Pieretti, N.; Zollinger, S. A.; Geberzahn, N.; Partecke, J.; Miranda, A. C.; Brumm, H.: Bird song and anthropogenic noise: Vocal constraints may explain why birds sing higher-frequency songs in cities. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 280 (1754), 20122798 (2013)
Geberzahn, N.; Gahr, M.: Undirected (solitary) birdsong in female and male blue-capped cordon-bleus (Uraeginthus cyanocephalus) and its endocrine correlates. PLoS One 6 (10), e26485 (2011)
Geberzahn, N.; Goymann, W.; ten Cate, C.: Threat signaling in female song-evidence from playbacks in a sex-role reversed bird species. Behavioral Ecology 21 (6), pp. 1147 - 1155 (2010)
Geberzahn, N.; Goymann, W.; Muck, C.; ten Cate, C.: Females alter their song when challenged in a sex-role reversed bird species. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 64 (2), pp. 193 - 204 (2009)
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