All Stories

  1. Why Birds Matter
  2. Bird and bat predation services in tropical forests and agroforestry landscapes
  3. Why birds matter: from economic ornithology to ecosystem services
  4. Urban residents' perceptions of birds in the neighborhood: Biodiversity, cultural ecosystem services, and disservices
  5. Having our yards and sharing them too: the collective effects of yards on native bird species in an urban landscape
  6. Native bark-foraging birds preferentially forage in infected ash (Fraxinus spp.) and prove effective predators of the invasive emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire)
  7. Differential response of nest predators to the presence of a decoy parent in artificial nests
  8. Scale-dependent neighborhood effects: shared doom and associational refuge
  9. Foraging Behavior and Coexistence of Two Sunbird Species in a Kenyan Woodland
  10. The Need to Quantify Ecosystem Services Provided by Birds
  11. Erratum
  12. Nesting in an uncertain world: information and sampling the future
  13. Effects of human disturbance on composition and structure ofBrachystegiawoodland in Arabuko-Sokoke Forest, Kenya
  14. Ecosystem Services Provided by Birds
  15. Reappraisal of the role of big, fierce predators!
  16. Augmenting Population Monitoring Programs with Behavioral Indicators During Ecological Restorations
  17. Optimal foraging and gut constraints: reconciling two schools of thought
  18. QUANTIFYING MALE WOOD THRUSH NEST-ATTENDANCE AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO NEST SUCCESS
  19. BEHAVIORAL INTERACTIONS BETWEEN FIRE ANTS AND VERTEBRATE NEST PREDATORS AT TWO BLACK-CAPPED VIREO NESTS
  20. Adaptive Herbivore Ecology. From Resources to Populations in Variable Environments
  21. Does Human Scent Bias Seed Removal Studies?
  22. DOES HUMAN SCENT BIAS SEED REMOVAL STUDIES?
  23. Foliage Structure Influences Foraging of Insectivorous Forest Birds: An Experimental Study
  24. FOLIAGE STRUCTURE INFLUENCES FORAGING OF INSECTIVOROUS FOREST BIRDS: AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY
  25. Does Vertical Partitioning of Nest Sites Decrease Nest Predation?
  26. DOES VERTICAL PARTITIONING OF NEST SITES DECREASE NEST PREDATION?
  27. Effects of Exotic Lonicera and Rhamnus on Songbird Nest Predation
  28. Nest Placement and Mortality: Is Nest Predation a Random Event in Space and Time?
  29. Nest Predation on Woodland Songbirds: When Is Nest Predation Density Dependent?
  30. The Birder's Bug Book Gilbert Waldbauer
  31. The Relative Impacts of Nest Predation and Brood Parasitism on Seasonal Fecundity in Songbirds
  32. Are Bird-Consumed Fruits Complementary Resources?
  33. Predator‐Mediated Interactions between and within Guilds of Nesting Songbirds: Experimental and Observational Evidence
  34. Plant Morphology and Recruitment of the Third Trophic Level: Subtle and Little-Recognized Defenses?
  35. Fruit Choice in Migrating North American Birds: Field and Aviary Experiments
  36. Effects of Olfactory Cues on Artificial-Nest Experiments
  37. Insectivorous Birds Increase Growth of White Oak through Consumption of Leaf-Chewing Insects
  38. Restoration of Endangered Species
  39. Variation of Dispersal Phenology in a Bird-Dispersed Shrub, Cornus Drummondii
  40. Spatial and temporal patterns of postdispersal seed predation
  41. The Evolution of Fruit Color in Fleshy-Fruited Plants
  42. Color Preferences of Frugivorous Birds in Relation to the Colors of Fleshy Fruits
  43. Variation in Postdispersal Survival of Vertebrate-Dispersed Seeds: Effects of Density, Habitat, Location, Season, and Species
  44. Avian foliage structure preferences for foraging and the effect of prey biomass
  45. Ultraviolet Reflectance of Fruits of Vertebrate-Dispersed Plants
  46. An Experimental Test of Prey Distribution Learning in Two Paruline Warblers
  47. Foreword
  48. Restoration planning
  49. Implemented restorations
  50. Conceptual issues in restoration ecology
  51. Synthesis and future directions: biology, politics and reality
  52. The Evolution of Gut Modulation and Diet Specialization as a Consumer-Resource Game
  53. Effects of foliage structure on the foraging behavior of insectivorous forest birds.