🚨We're hiring again, this time for a research assistant position 🚨
The position is to help with a project looking at learning and social behaviour in birds along an urban gradient
Position at
@ceec-research.bsky.social
📆28th June deadline
More info: shorturl.at/vBxiW
#ringing #fieldwork
Masturbation among birds is ‘natural’ and should not be punished, say experts
www.theguardian.com
Study finds activity is not harmful or caused by stress of captivity – and is in fact more common in wild birds
Do you want to know if birds can use hair-like feathers as high-frequency sound receptors during echolocation? Join our team as PhD student or postdoc and find out!
⬇️
www.bi.mpg.de/2809383/job_...
📣🧬 Postdoc Alert🧬📣
We are hiring a 2+ year NERC-funded postdoc at Edinburgh Uni investigating causes and consequences of sex differences in recombination in house sparrows in Norway. Informal enquiries welcome at [email protected] 🙂
Details here: elxw.fa.em3.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/Candid...
First analysis of the #greylaggoose call repertoire using #machinelearning broadly matches early descriptions and shows how much different representations of audio data can influence clustering results.
@univie.ac.at www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Gies et al. 2026, Scientific Reports
📸 M. Klymenko
#HotOffThePress 🔥🖊️ "Investigating the structure of the greylag goose vocal repertoire: what can unsupervised methods tell us?“ 🪿
June 2026. Scientific Reports. @lenagies.bsky.social, Jonas Lesigang, Sonia Kleindorfer & @tecumsehfitch.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1038/s415...
Happy World Parrot Day!
Parrots have been part of my professional and personal life for many decades, especially those in 🇦🇺. Looking forward to more parrot research and photos in the coming years.
#ornithology #parrots #birds 🪶 🦜
Nuthatch. An older comic.
Our latest episode of Transmissions is out! This one features Prof. Dr. Lucy Aplin, a leading cognitive ecologist from the University of Zurich and Australian National University.
This marks our very first episode dedicated entirely to understanding animal culture!
youtu.be/M7qCTKRNVuA?...
#HotOffThePress 🔥🖊️ "Fluctuations in direct human presence, not predictable weekly cycles, influence avoidance behaviour in ravens"🐦⬛
June 2026. Movement Ecology. @varalikajain.bsky.social, @matthiasloretto.bsky.social, Thomas Bugnyar & @pesumas.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1186/s404...
Scientific Reports - Investigating the structure of the greylag goose vocal repertoire: what can unsupervised methods tell us?
Background Rhythms in human activity create patterns of opportunities and disturbances for wildlife, influencing their behaviour and spatial ecology. The weekend effect hypothesis posits that weekday-weekend routines in human activity can impact wildlife in creating cyclic conditions. At our study site – an outdoor wildlife park – free-flying ravens opportunistically exploit food intended for captive animals on a routine basis. While disturbances from visitor activity levels are typically low on weekdays and high on weekends, they can also vary day-to-day. Our access to data detailing visitor numbers makes our context well-suited to test whether ravens anticipate and respond to predictable weekday-weekend patterns following (1) a ‘5 + 2’ structure, or if they respond (2) flexibly to fluctuations in direct human activity levels. By testing the weekend effect hypothesis from the perspective of a ‘5 + 2’ pattern versus flexibly responding to fluctuations in human activity, we better understand wildlife response strategies to human activity. Methods Using long-term GPS tracking data, we investigated the weekend effect hypothesis by examining raven foraging probability and space use across two temporal scales: (1) daily patterns over five years, encompassing periods of Covid-19 pandemic-related restrictions, and (2) bihourly patterns over six weeks. We hypothesized that increased human activity levels would result in lower foraging probabilities and higher space use in ravens, varying between weekdays and weekends. Results Our findings provided limited support for the weekend effect hypothesis, considering a ‘5 + 2’ pattern in human activity. However, ravens consistently avoided elevated human activity by decreasing in their probability of foraging at the site and increasing space use on a daily level. Conclusions Our study reveals that ravens are behaviourally flexible in their movement responses to disturbance when exploiting anthropogenically created foraging opportunities. Changes influencing anthropogenic resources and disturbances at resources should consider the potential knock-on effects to wildlife.