Romero-Haro, A. A.; Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Pérez-Rodríguez, L.; Bleu, J.; Criscuolo, F.; Zahn, S.; Farine, D. R.; Boogert, N. J.: Males with high levels of oxidative damage form weak pair bonds in a gregarious bird species. Animal Behaviour 210, pp. 11 - 22 (2024)
Ardila-Villamizar, M.; Alarcon-Nieto, G.; Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.: Fear in urban landscapes: conspecific flock size drives escape decisions in tropical birds. Royal Society Open Science 9 (11), 221344 (2022)
Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Farine, D. R.: Demographic processes in animal networks are a question of time: a comment on Shizuka and Johnson. Behavioral Ecology 31 (1), pp. 12 - 13 (2020)
He, P.; Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Farine, D. R.: The role of habitat configuration in shaping social structure: A gap in studies of animal social complexity. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 73 (1), 9 (2019)
Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Blumstein, D. T.; Armitage, K. B.; Childs, D. Z.: Transient LTRE analysis reveals the demographic and trait‐mediated processes that buffer population growth. Ecology Letters 21 (11), pp. 1693 - 1703 (2018)
Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Read, D. W.; Blumstein, D. T.: Can individual variation in phenotypic plasticity enhance population viability? Ecological Modelling 352, pp. 19 - 30 (2017)
Yang, W. J.; Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Blumstein, D. T.: A cost of being amicable in a hibernating mammal. Behavioral Ecology 28 (1), pp. 11 - 19 (2017)
Rosenbaum, S.; Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Stoinski, T. S.: Group structure predicts variation in proximity relationships between male–female and male–infant pairs of mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei). Primates 57 (1), pp. 17 - 28 (2016)
Fuong, H.; Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Blumstein, D. T.: Are social attributes associated with alarm calling propensity? Behavioral Ecology 26 (2), pp. 587 - 592 (2015)
Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Hubbard, L.; Blumstein, D. T.: Group size affects social relationships in yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris). Behavioral Ecology 26 (3), pp. 909 - 915 (2015)
Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Martin, J. G. A.; Armitage, K. B.; Oli, M. K.; Blumstein, D. T.: Environmentally induced phenotypic variation in wild yellow-bellied marmots. Journal of Mammalogy 96 (2), pp. 269 - 278 (2015)
Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Bernal-Parra, L. M.; Forero-Acosta, G.; Ruiz-Garcia, M.: Genetic structure of a group of capybaras, Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris (Rodentia: Hydrocheridae) in the Colombian Eastern Llanos. Revista De Biologia Tropical 59 (4), pp. 1777 - 1793 (2011)
Maldonado-Chaparro, A. A.; Blumstein, D. T.: Management implications of capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) social behavior. Biological Conservation 141, pp. 1945 - 1952 (2008)
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