Publications of Miriam Liedvogel
All genres
Journal Article (55)
41.
Journal Article
1, pp. 39 - 46 (2013)
The behavioural ecology of animal movement: reflections upon potential synergies. Animal Migration 42.
Journal Article
25 (5), pp. 813 - 823 (2012)
Integrating candidate gene and quantitative genetic approaches to understand variation in timing of breeding in wild tit populations. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 43.
Journal Article
26 (11), pp. 561 - 569 (2011)
The genetics of migration on the move. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 44.
Journal Article
41 (5), pp. 543 - 550 (2010)
Low variability and absence of phenotypic correlates of Clock gene variation in a great tit Parus major population. Journal of Avian Biology 45.
Journal Article
32 (4), pp. 619 - 624 (2010)
Night-time neuronal activation of Cluster N in a day- and night-migrating songbird. European Journal of Neuroscience: European Neuroscience Association 46.
Journal Article
7 (Suppl. 2), pp. S147 - S162 (2010)
Cryptochromes—a potential magnetoreceptor: what do we know and what do we want to know? Journal of the Royal Society Interface 47.
Journal Article
19 (4), pp. 832 - 843 (2010)
Association between DRD4 gene polymorphism and personality variation in great tits: a test across four wild populations. Molecular Ecology 48.
Journal Article
150 (3), pp. 713 - 715 (2009)
Thermal paper can replace typewriter correction paper in Emlen funnels. Journal of Ornithology 49.
Journal Article
18 (11), pp. 2444 - 2456 (2009)
Phenotypic correlates of Clock gene variation in a wild blue tit population: evidence for a role in seasonal timing of reproduction. Molecular Ecology 50.
Journal Article
3 (3), e1768 (2008)
Molecular mapping of movement-associated areas in the avian brain: a motor theory for vocal learning origin. PLoS One 51.
Journal Article
2 (10), e1106 (2007)
Chemical magnetoreception: bird cryptochrome 1a is excited by blue light and forms long-lived radical-pairs. PLoS One 52.
Journal Article
25 (4), pp. 1166 - 1173 (2007)
Lateralized activation of Cluster N in the brains of migratory songbirds. European Journal of Neuroscience: European Neuroscience Association 53.
Journal Article
102 (23), pp. 8339 - 8344 (2005)
Night-vision brain area in migratory songbirds. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 54.
Journal Article
14 (21), pp. 1946 - 1949 (2004)
Migratory birds use head scans to detect the direction of the earth’s magnetic field. Current Biology 55.
Journal Article
101 (39), pp. 14294 - 14299 (2004)
Cryptochromes and neuronal-activity markers colocalize in the retina of migratory birds during magnetic orientation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Book Chapter (9)
56.
Book Chapter
2, pp. 1689 - 1709 (Eds. Morton, J. Y.; Diggelen, F. v.; Spilker Jr., J. J.; Parkinson, B. W.). Wiley-IEEE (2020)
Orientation and navigation in the animal world. In: Position navigation & timing technologies in the 21st century, Vol. 57.
Book Chapter
Dutheil, J. Y.). Humana, New York (2020)
Avian population genomics taking off: latest findings and future prospects. In: Statistical population genomics, pp. 413 - 433 (Ed. 58.
Book Chapter
2, 2nd Ed., pp. 323 - 330 (Ed. Choe, J. C.). Elsevier (Academic Press) (2019)
Genetics of animal and bird migration. In: Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior, Vol. 59.
Book Chapter
(Micro)evolutionary changes and the evolutionary potential of bird migration. In: Bird Species: How They Arise, Modify and Vanish, pp. 109 - 127 (Ed. Tietze, D. T.). Springer International Publishing, Cham (2018)
60.
Book Chapter
The light-dependent magnetic compass. In: Photobiology: The Science of Light and Life, Online Ed., pp. 323 - 334 (Ed. Björn, L. O.). Springer (2015)