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1 rs, of their mobbing alarm calls (hereafter 'alarm calls').
2 rs in variations of a single type of mobbing alarm call.
3 id rodents and individuality in their social alarm calls.
4 el of complexity and sophistication in avian alarm calls.
5 advantageous for birds not to respond to all alarm calls.
6 rm calls from each other as well as from non-alarm calls.
7  would favor the early ability to respond to alarm calls.
8 irs, in response to which the females ceased alarm calling.
9  experiments in the field confirmed that the alarm calls alone are sufficient to elicit appropriate b
10                                    Likewise, alarm calls and attack flights increased from days 1-4 w
11 scriminate among calls, cardiac responses to alarm calls and control stimuli were recorded from 2 rea
12 posed of nonkin, suggesting that referential alarm calls are often given in situations when no geneti
13                                     Using an alarm-call-based field experiment, we show that chimpanz
14      While the semantic properties of vervet alarm calls bear little resemblance to human words, the
15 to the informational content of each other's alarm calls but prioritize them differently relative to
16  young can discriminate between 2 classes of alarm calls but they may not discriminate these calls fr
17                                              Alarm-calling by oxpeckers significantly improved the ra
18                                       Animal alarm calls can contain detailed information about a pre
19  dangerous snake, whether or not he gives an alarm call depends on his perception of another individu
20  species to eavesdrop most on other species' alarm calls [e.g., 1, 2] but also that solitary-living s
21 imal communication, functionally referential alarm calls elicit the same behavioral responses as thei
22 ing groups that differed in the frequency of alarm-call exposure.
23   This requires discrimination of classes of alarm calls from each other as well as from non-alarm ca
24                                              Alarm calls given in response to leopards, eagles, and s
25                                Vervet monkey alarm calling has long been the paradigmatic example of
26                                  Research on alarm calls has yielded rare glimpses into the minds of
27 dy suggests that primates monitor the effect alarm calls have on others.
28          Despite the central role the vervet alarm calls have played for understanding the evolution
29 t the frequency parameters, of their mobbing alarm calls (hereafter 'alarm calls').
30 at current levels of road traffic noise mask alarm calls, impeding the ability of great tits to perce
31 we show that chimpanzees were more likely to alarm call in response to a snake in the presence of una
32 hat breed in nonkin groups, give one type of alarm call in response to aerial threats (flying raptors
33                 Rhinos alerted by oxpeckers' alarm calls never re-oriented in our direction but moved
34 lysis showed that males mimicked the mobbing alarm calls of multiple species calling together, enhanc
35 amples of solitary species responding to the alarm calls of other species, however, are limited and u
36 hrus ater and the referential anti-parasitic alarm calls of the yellow warbler Setophaga petechia, up
37                                          The alarm calls of vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus pygerythrus)
38                   Many animals recognize the alarm calls produced by other species, but the amount of
39 apid development of post-emergent behavioral alarm-call responses.
40 o which they were attracted by broadcasts of alarm calls (social information).
41  (Poecile atricapillus) have a sophisticated alarm call system in which they encode complex informati
42 the authors describe playback studies on the alarm call system of two colobine species, the King colo
43 wever revealed the use of several additional alarm calling systems in primates.
44 When the number of signals is limited, as in alarm calling, the system tends to evolve to group toget
45 gs represent an important new evidence-based alarm call; the next pandemic may not be a sudden event,
46 ations of these heterospecific "chick-a-dee" alarm calls, thereby evidencing that they have gained im
47                  The COVID-19 pandemic is an alarm call to all on the risks of zoonotic diseases and
48  or individually to intra- and interspecific alarm calls, to a raptor silhouette (aerial predation ri
49               Both species produce two basic alarm call types, snorts and acoustically variable roari
50 eover, the females persistently continued to alarm call until their own male produced calls with the
51  both the production and perception of avian alarm calls using a combination of lab and field experim
52 nalities' in the form of distinct regimes of alarm call variants.
53 al cues include facial reactions of disgust, alarm-call vocalizations, and reduction in food-associat
54  seen the snake or had not been present when alarm calls were emitted.
55                                              Alarm calls were significantly more common if the caller
56 s [8, 9]), but this does not usually include alarm calls, which are thought to be the product of kin