Vocal mimicry of the paraside whydahs (Vidua) and response of female whydahs to the songs of their hosts (Pytilia) and their mimics
- 30 November 1973
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Animal Behaviour
- Vol. 21 (4) , 762-771
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0003-3472(73)80102-2
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inter-Populational Song Dialect Discrimination in the White-Crowned SparrowOrnithological Applications, 1971
- The Vocal Behaviour of the Indian Hill Mynah, Gracula religiosaAnimal Behaviour Monographs, 1970
- Beobachtungen an Paradieswitwen(Steganura paradisaea L., Steganura obtusa Chapin) und der Strohwitwe(Tetraenura fischeri Reichenow) in OstafrikaJournal of Ornithology, 1969
- Song recognition by territorial male buntings (Passerin A)Animal Behaviour, 1969
- The Song of the Chingolo, Zonotrichia capensis, in Argentina: Description and Evaluation of a System of DialectsOrnithological Applications, 1969
- Interspecific Communication Signals in Parasitic BirdsThe American Naturalist, 1967
- Vocal responses of white-crowned sparrows to recorded songs of their own and another speciesAnimal Behaviour, 1966
- Zur Rassengliederung vonPytilia melba (L.)Journal of Ornithology, 1963
- THE DISPLAYS GIVEN BY PASSERINES IN COURTSHIP AND REPRODUCTIVE FIGHTING: A REVIEWIbis, 1961
- THE DISPLAYS GIVEN BY PASSERINES IN COURTSHIP AND REPRODUCTIVE FIGHTING: A REVIEWIbis, 1961