Publications of Johannes Krietsch
All genres
Journal Article (11)
2024
Journal Article
141 (3), ukae016 (2024)
Variation in nuptial color in relation to sex, individual quality and mating success in the sex-role reversed Phalaropus fulicarius (Red Phalarope). Ornithology
Journal Article
35 (1), arad084 (2024)
Mutual mate guarding with limited sexual conflict in a sex-role-reversed shorebird. Behavioral Ecology
Journal Article
729, pp. 1 - 29 (2024)
From land to sea: The fall migration of the red phalarope through the Western Hemisphere. Marine Ecology-Progress Series 2023
Journal Article
77 (12), pp. 2590 - 2605 (2023)
Egg size variation in the context of polyandry: A case study using long-term field data from snowy plovers. Evolution: International journal of organic evolution
Journal Article
92 (8), pp. 1639 - 1657 (2023)
Sexual transmission may drive pair similarity of the cloacal microbiome in a polyandrous species. Journal of Animal Ecology 2022
Journal Article
183, pp. 77 - 92 (2022)
Extrapair paternity in a sequentially polyandrous shorebird: Limited evidence for the sperm storage hypothesis. Animal Behaviour 2021
Journal Article
8, 683071 (2021)
Seabird migration strategies: Flight budgets, diel activity patterns, and lunar influence. Frontiers in Marine Science
Journal Article
14 (5), e12824 (2021)
Multispecies tracking reveals a major seabird hotspot in the North Atlantic. Conservation Letters 2020
Journal Article
287 (1920), 20192789 (2020)
Wind conditions influence breeding season movements in a nomadic polygynous shorebird. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 2017
Journal Article
578, pp. 213 - 225 (2017)
Consistent variation in individual migration strategies of brown skuas. Marine Ecology-Progress Series 2016
Journal Article
39 (4), pp. 573 - 582 (2016)
Long-term dataset reveals declines in breeding success and high fluctuations in the number of breeding pairs in two skua species breeding on King George Island. Polar Biology Thesis - PhD (1)
2023
Thesis - PhD
Mating behaviour of two polygamous shorebird species in the Arctic. Dissertation, 163 pp. (2023)