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Lista de obras de Malika Ihle

A sex-chromosome inversion causes strong overdominance for sperm traits that affect siring success

artículo científico publicado en 2017

Counter culture: Causes, extent and solutions of systematic bias in the analysis of behavioural counts

artículo científico publicado en 2019

Does hatching failure breed infidelity?

artículo científico publicado en 2012

Fitness Benefits of Mate Choice for Compatibility in a Socially Monogamous Species

artículo científico publicado en 2015

Inbreeding depression of sperm traits in the zebra finch Taeniopygia guttata.

artículo científico publicado en 2015

Irreproducible text-book "knowledge": The effects of color bands on zebra finch fitness

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Manipulation of Color Patterns in Jumping Spiders for Use in Behavioral Experiments

scientific article published on 21 May 2019

Measuring Up to Reality: Null Models and Analysis Simulations to Study Parental Coordination Over Provisioning Offspring

artículo científico publicado en 2019

Methods for independently manipulating palatability and color in small insect prey

artículo científico publicado en 2020

Rapid assessment of female preference for male size predicts subsequent choice of spawning partner in a socially monogamous cichlid fish

artículo científico publicado en 2011

Rearing Success Does Not Improve With Apparent Pair Coordination in Offspring Provisioning

artículo científico publicado en 2019

Simulated hatching failure predicts female plasticity in extra-pair behavior over successive broods

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Striving for transparent and credible research: practical guidelines for behavioral ecologists.

artículo científico publicado en 2017

Towards open, reliable, and transparent ecology and evolutionary biology

artículo científico publicado en 2021

Transparent and credible practices under the microscope: a response to comments on Ihle et al.

artículo científico publicado en 2017

Variation in Reproductive Success Across Captive Populations: Methodological Differences, Potential Biases and Opportunities

article