Publicaciones (166) Publicaciones de Martina Carrete

2023

  1. Correction: A protective nesting association with native species counteracts biotic resistance for the spread of an invasive parakeet from urban into rural habitats (Frontiers in Zoology, (2020), 17, 1, (13), 10.1186/s12983-020-00360-2)

    Frontiers in Zoology

  2. Erratum: Author Correction: Heritability of fear of humans in urban and rural populations of a bird species (Scientific reports (2016) 6 (31060))

    Scientific reports

  3. Erratum: Author Correction: Personality-dependent breeding dispersal in rural but not urban burrowing owls (Scientific reports (2019) 9 1 (2886))

    Scientific reports

  4. Erratum: Author Correction: Urban conservation hotspots: predation release allows the grassland-specialist burrowing owl to perform better in the city (Scientific reports (2017) 7 1 (3527))

    Scientific reports

  5. Erratum: Correction: Sex, personality and conspecific density influence natal dispersal with lifetime fitness consequences in urban and rural burrowing owls (PloS one (2020) 15 2 (e0226089))

    PloS one

  6. Identification of potential invasive alien species in Spain through horizon scanning

    Journal of Environmental Management, Vol. 345

  7. Insularity determines nestling sex ratio variation in Egyptian vulture populations

    Ecology and Evolution, Vol. 13, Núm. 8

  8. Intraspecific competition and individual behaviour but not urbanization affect the dietary patterns of a generalist avian predator

    Scientific Reports, Vol. 13, Núm. 1

  9. Large-scale movement patterns in a social vulture are influenced by seasonality, sex, and breeding region

    Ecology and Evolution, Vol. 13, Núm. 2

  10. Nesting innovations in neotropical parrots associated to anthropogenic environmental changes

    Ecology and Evolution, Vol. 13, Núm. 9

  11. Nestling sex ratio is unaffected by individual and population traits in the griffon vulture

    Current Zoology, Vol. 69, Núm. 3, pp. 227-235

  12. Poaching sources and trade routes in Peru and Ecuador warn of the unsustainable rural demand for preferred parrot species

    Conservation Science and Practice, Vol. 5, Núm. 7