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Susan Lingle
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Year
What makes a cry a cry? A review of infant distress vocalizations
S Lingle, MT Wyman, R Kotrba, LJ Teichroeb, CA Romanow
Current Zoology 58 (5), 698-726, 2012
1902012
Fight or flight? Antipredator behavior and the escalation of coyote encounters with deer
S Lingle, S Pellis
Oecologia 131, 154-164, 2002
1462002
Coyote predation and habitat segregation of white‐tailed deer and mule deer
S Lingle
Ecology 83 (7), 2037-2048, 2002
1322002
Anti‐predator strategies and grouping patterns in white‐tailed deer and mule deer
S Lingle
Ethology 107 (4), 295-314, 2001
1282001
Detection and Avoidance of Predators in White‐Tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and Mule Deer (O. hemionus)
S Lingle, WF Wilson
Ethology 107 (2), 125-147, 2001
942001
Deer mothers are sensitive to infant distress vocalizations of diverse mammalian species
S Lingle, T Riede
The American Naturalist 184 (4), 510-522, 2014
912014
Interspecific variation in antipredator behaviour leads to differential vulnerability of mule deer and white‐tailed deer fawns early in life
S Lingle, SM Pellis, WF Wilson
Journal of Animal Ecology 74 (6), 1140-1149, 2005
812005
Seasonal variation in coyote feeding behaviour and mortality of white-tailed deer and mule deer
S Lingle
Canadian Journal of Zoology 78 (1), 85-99, 2000
652000
Group composition and cohesion in sympatric white-tailed deer and mule deer
S Lingle
Canadian Journal of Zoology 81 (7), 1119-1130, 2003
612003
Prey behavior, age-dependent vulnerability, and predation rates
S Lingle, A Feldman, MS Boyce, WF Wilson
The American Naturalist 172 (5), 712-725, 2008
492008
Cervids with different vocal behavior demonstrate different viscoelastic properties of their vocal folds
T Riede, S Lingle, EJ Hunter, IR Titze
Journal of morphology 271 (1), 1-11, 2010
472010
Altruism and recognition in the antipredator defence of deer: 1. Species and individual variation in fawn distress calls
S Lingle, D Rendall, SM Pellis
Animal Behaviour 73 (5), 897-905, 2007
452007
Escape gaits of white-tailed deer, mule deer and their hybrids: gaits observed and patterns of limb coordination
S Lingle
Behaviour, 153-181, 1992
381992
Altruism and recognition in the antipredator defence of deer: 2. Why mule deer help nonoffspring fawns
S Lingle, D Rendall, WF Wilson, RW DeYoung, SM Pellis
Animal Behaviour 73 (5), 907-916, 2007
372007
Escape gaits of white-tailed deer, mule deer, and their hybrids: body configuration, biomechanics, and function
S Lingle
Canadian Journal of Zoology 71 (4), 708-724, 1993
351993
Fundamental frequency is key to response of female deer to juvenile distress calls
LJ Teichroeb, T Riede, R Kotrba, S Lingle
Behavioural processes 92, 15-23, 2013
332013
Play for prey: do deer fawns play to develop species-typical antipredator tactics or to prepare for the unexpected?
RN Carter, CA Romanow, SM Pellis, S Lingle
Animal behaviour 156, 31-40, 2019
262019
The effect of terrain and female density on survival of neonatal white‐tailed deer and mule deer fawns
M Bonar, M Manseau, J Geisheimer, T Bannatyne, S Lingle
Ecology and Evolution 6 (13), 4387-4402, 2016
162016
Antipredator behaviour, coyote predation and habitat segregation of white-tailed deer and mule deer
SH Lingle
University of Cambridge, 1998
111998
Embracing the biological roots of the infant’s cry
S Lingle
Parenting 19 (1-2), 56-58, 2019
82019
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