
Publications of Camila Patricia Villavicencio
All genres
Journal Article (11)
2021
Journal Article
18, 8 (2021)
Neuroendocrine patterns underlying seasonal song and year-round territoriality in male black redstarts. Frontiers in Zoology 2015
Journal Article
149, pp. 310 - 316 (2015)
Does a short-term increase in testosterone affect the intensity or persistence of territorial aggression? - An approach using an individual's hormonal reactive scope to study hormonal effects on behavior. Physiology & Behavior 2014
Journal Article
11, 11 (2014)
Parental care, loss of paternity and circulating levels of testosterone and corticosterone in a socially monogamous song bird. Frontiers in Zoology
Journal Article
205, pp. 159 - 165 (2014)
The number of life-history stages does not influence the androgen responsiveness to male–male interactions: Sedentary and migratory black redstarts (Phoenicurus ochruros) do not elevate testosterone in response to simulated territorial intrusions. General and Comparative Endocrinology 2013
Journal Article
184, pp. 93 - 102 (2013)
Associated and disassociated patterns in hormones, song, behavior and brain receptor expression between life-cycle stages in male black redstarts, Phoenicurus ochruros. General and Comparative Endocrinology
Journal Article
64 (3), pp. 461 - 467 (2013)
Experimental induction of social instability during early breeding does not alter testosterone levels in male black redstarts, a socially monogamous songbird. Hormones and Behavior 2012
Journal Article
66 (2), pp. 261 - 274 (2012)
Ecological drivers of group living in two populations of the communally rearing rodent, Octodon degus. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Journal Article
124 (3), pp. 531 - 537 (2012)
Breeding biology of the southern house wren on Chiloe island, southern Chile. Wilson Journal of Ornithology 2009
Journal Article
115 (5), pp. 465 - 474 (2009)
Inter-population variation in hoarding behaviour in degus, Octodon degus. Ethology
Journal Article
78 (2), pp. 377 - 384 (2009)
Familiarity and phenotypic similarity influence kin discrimination in the social rodent Octodon degus. Animal Behaviour 2005
Journal Article
78, pp. 169 - 170 (2005)
Undergraduate teaching of evolution in Chile: More than natural selection. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural