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Reinder Radersma

Researcher at Lund University

Publications -  29
Citations -  1220

Reinder Radersma is an academic researcher from Lund University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Daphnia. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 26 publications receiving 965 citations. Previous affiliations of Reinder Radersma include Wageningen University and Research Centre & University of Oxford.

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Hampered Foraging and Migratory Performance in Swans Infected with Low-Pathogenic Avian Influenza A Virus

TL;DR: It is shown that infected swans experienced delayed migration, leaving their wintering site more than a month after uninfected animals, and this was correlated with infected birds travelling shorter distances and fuelling and feeding at reduced rates.
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Fewer invited talks by women in evolutionary biology symposia

TL;DR: Women were under‐represented among invited speakers at symposia (15% women) compared to all presenters, regular oral presenters (41%) and plenary speakers (25%).
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Consistent individual differences in the social phenotypes of wild great tits, Parus major

TL;DR: Social behaviours were significantly repeatable across all timescales, with the highest repeatability observed in group size choice and unweighted degree, a measure of gregariousness, which provides rare evidence of stable social phenotypes in a wild population of animals.
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Inferring social structure from temporal data

TL;DR: It is demonstrated how the choice of the extraction method and the temporal resolution parameter influence the appearance and properties of the retrieved network and suggested a modus operandi that minimises observer bias due to arbitrary parameter choice.
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The role of social and ecological processes in structuring animal populations : A case study from automated tracking of wild birds

TL;DR: A framework using null models to identify the social and spatial patterns that contribute to phenotypic structure in a wild population of songbirds is developed, highlighting how different scales of social decision-making can interact to drive phenotyping structure in animal populations.