Biology PhD student at the University of Oxford
DPhil student @intelligentearth.bsky.social & Oxford biology graduate.
Machine learning, biodiversity, sensory ecology, biologgers, birds
The trumpetfish guy | PDRA @ Oxford Biology, University of Oxford | Enduring LUFC fan (he/him)
Scientist. Physiologist, Zoologist, Ornithologist - Assoc Prof at The University of Oxford. Associate Ed at RSocPublishing π³οΈβππͺπΊπ¦πΎ
Postdoctoral Research Associate at @insectneurolab.bsky.social at @durham-university.bsky.social π¬π§π©πͺ Interested in #Behaviour, #SensoryEcology, #Physiology & #Cognition of Invertebrates π¦ππ¦π¦π¦π¦
π https://christiandrerup.com
Updates from the Marine Behavioural Ecology group working in the Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge.
Social evolution, social aging & the benefits of social network ties. Professor @crab-exeter.bsky.social, Dept. of Psych, Uni. of Exeter. Big team science collaborations: #MacaqueNet #CBRU. Editor: Animal Behaviour. She/her. http://linktr.ee/laurenbrent
Social Evolution, Life History Evolution, Conservation, Killer Whales. Prof of Behavioural Ecology at the University of Exeter https://experts.exeter.ac.uk/436-darren-croft - Executive Director of the Center for Whale Research https://www.whaleresearch.com
Professor of Animal Behaviour. www.SHOALgroup.org
Visual ecologist at Exeter University. I study how visual information affects the ecology, behaviour, survival and conservation of many different animals. Areas of interest include camouflage, signalling, visual modelling and artificial light at night
Researching primate behaviours | Postdoc at UZH Evo Anthro & NCCR Evolving Language | Former Postdoc at MPI Animal Behavior & DPhil at Oxford Biology | Tools & Culture, Language Evo, Development & Senescence | He/They π
Biology DPhil student at Oxford University πΏπ
She/her
Behavioural ecologist interested in sensory ecology of social behaviour and predator-prey interactions. Royal Society University Research Fellow.
University of Oxford
Postdoc at the University of Oxford