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61“…Since the last review of this kind was undertaken, the immunodiagnosis of TB in meerkats and African wild dogs was reported for the first time. …”
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62por Mattila, Heather R., Kernen, Hannah G., Otis, Gard W., Nguyen, Lien T. P., Pham, Hanh D., Knight, Olivia M., Phan, Ngoc T.“…Antipredator pipes share acoustic traits with alarm shrieks, fear screams and panic calls of primates, birds and meerkats. Workers making antipredator pipes exposed their Nasonov gland, suggesting the potential for multimodal alarm signalling that warns nestmates about the presence of dangerous hornets and assembles workers for defence. …”
Publicado 2021
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63por Thorley, Jack, Mendonça, Rute, Vullioud, Philippe, Torrents-Ticó, Miquel, Zöttl, Markus, Gaynor, David, Clutton-Brock, Tim“…A similar pattern is observed in cooperatively breeding meerkats, Suricata suricatta, and there is no unequivocal evidence of caste differentiation in any cooperative vertebrate. …”
Publicado 2018
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64por English, Sinead, Bateman, Andrew W, Mares, Rafael, Ozgul, Arpat, Clutton-Brock, Tim H“…Here, we examined variation in the influence of the abiotic, social and maternal environment on growth across life stages in a wild population of cooperatively breeding meerkats. Cooperatively breeding vertebrates are ideal for investigating environmental influences on growth. …”
Publicado 2014
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65por Harrison, Natasha D., Maag, Nino, Haverkamp, Paul J., Ganswindt, André, Manser, Marta B., Clutton‐Brock, Tim H., Ozgul, Arpat, Cozzi, Gabriele“…By analysing individual behaviour and concentrations of faecal glucocorticoid metabolites (fGCM), a stress‐associated biomarker, we sought to identify the proximate causes behind differences in survival and reproduction between dispersing and resident meerkats Suricata suricatta. 3. We used data collected on 67 dispersing and 108 resident females to investigate (a) which individual, social and environmental factors are correlated to foraging and vigilance, and whether the role of such factors differs among dispersal phases, and between dispersers and residents; (b) how time allocated to either foraging or vigilance correlated to survival in dispersers and residents and (c) the link between aggression and change in fGCM concentration, and their relationship with reproductive rates in dispersing groups and resident groups with either long‐established or newly established dominant females. 4. …”
Publicado 2021
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66por Chakravarty, Pritish, Maalberg, Maiki, Cozzi, Gabriele, Ozgul, Arpat, Aminian, Kamiar“…We showcase the utility of our method on triaxial magnetometer data collected on ten wild Kalahari meerkats (Suricata suricatta), with annotated video recordings of each individual serving as groundtruth. …”
Publicado 2019
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67“…In order to evaluate the performance of the model, we tested it on a dataset of Amur tiger torsos and the face datasets of six different species, including lions, golden monkeys, meerkats, red pandas, tigers, and chimpanzees. The experimental results showed that our wildlife re-identification model has good generalization ability and is superior to the existing methods in mAP (mean average precision), and obtained comparable results in the metrics Rank 1 and Rank 5.…”
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