D
Dieter Wallschläger
Researcher at University of Potsdam
Publications - 11
Citations - 134
Dieter Wallschläger is an academic researcher from University of Potsdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ciconia & White stork. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 11 publications receiving 125 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A virological survey in migrating waders and other waterfowl in one of the most important resting sites of Germany.
A. Hlinak,Ralf-Udo Mühle,Ortrud Werner,Anja Globig,Elke Starick,Horst Schirrmeier,Bernd Hoffmann,Andreas Engelhardt,Dagmar Hübner,Franz Josef Conraths,Dieter Wallschläger,Helmut Kruckenberg,Thomas Müller +12 more
TL;DR: The results confirm that the restricted resting sites in Western Europe must be considered as important locations for the intra- and interspecies transmission of avian viruses.
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Managing open habitats by wild ungulate browsing and grazing: A case-study in North-Eastern Germany
TL;DR: Wild ungulate browsing is a useful tool to inhibit encroachment of woody vegetation and to conserve a species-rich, open landscape.
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Declines in breeding site fidelity in an increasing population of White Storks Ciconia ciconia
TL;DR: The data suggest that the proportion of breeding dispersers has increased over time, indicating a density-dependent component in nest-site fidelity that may be linked to increased competition.
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Virological Monitoring of White Storks (Ciconia ciconia) for Avian Influenza
Thomas Müller,A. Hlinak,Conrad M. Freuling,Ralf-Udo Mühle,Andreas Engelhardt,Anja Globig,Christian Schulze,Elke Starick,Ute Eggers,B. Sass,Dieter Wallschläger,Jens Peter Teifke,Timm C. Harder,Franz Josef Conraths +13 more
TL;DR: Between 2003 and 2008, more than 600 white stork nestlings in the German federal state of Brandenburg were ringed and examined for influenza A viruses, and it was found that white storks seemed to serve as neither a vector nor as a reservoir for HPAIV in Germany.
Journal ArticleDOI
Song dialects in the yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella: bioacoustic variation between and within dialects
TL;DR: Multivariate statistics support dialect discrimination by ear and confirmed that only one element in yellowhammer song characterises dialect, which means there is insufficient evidence for the existence of a new subdialect.