Forstmeier, W.; Coltman, D. W.; Birkhead, T. R.: Maternal effects influence the sexual behavior of sons and daughters in the zebra finch. Evolution: International journal of organic evolution 58 (11), S. 2574 - 2583 (2004)
Forstmeier, W.; Leisler, B.: Repertoire size, sexual selection, and offspring viability in the great reed warbler: Changing patterns in space and time. Behavioral Ecology 15 (4), S. 555 - 563 (2004)
Forstmeier, W.: Extra-pair paternity in the dusky warbler, Phylloscopus fuscatus: A test of the "constrained female hypothesis". Behaviour 140 (8), S. 1117 - 1134 (2003)
Forstmeier, W.: Factors contributing to male mating success in the polygynous dusky warbler (Phylloscopus fuscatus). Behaviour 139 (10), S. 1361 - 1381 (2002)
Forstmeier, W.; Balsby, T. J. S.: Why mated dusky warblers sing so much: Territory guarding and male quality announcement. Behaviour 139 (1), S. 89 - 111 (2002)
Forstmeier, W.; Kempenaers, B.; Meyer, A.; Leisler, B.: A novel song parameter correlates with extra-pair paternity and reflects male longevity. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 269 (1499), S. 1479 - 1485 (2002)
Forstmeier, W.; Weiss, I.: Effects of nest predation in the Siberian chipmunk Tamias sibiricus on success of the dusky warbler Phylloscopus fuscatus breeding. Zoologichesky Zhurnal 81 (11), S. 1367 - 1370 (2002)
Forstmeier, W.; Bourski, O. V.; Leisler, B.: Habitat choice in Phylloscopus warblers: The role of morphology, phylogeny and competition. Oecologia 128 (4), S. 566 - 576 (2001)
Forstmeier, W.; Kuijper, D. P. J.; Leisler, B.: Polygyny in the dusky warbler, Phylloscopus fuscatus: The importance of female qualities. Animal Behaviour 62 (6), S. 1097 - 1108 (2001)
Forstmeier, W.; Leisler, B.; Kempenaers, B.: Bill morphology reflects female independence from male parental help. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 268 (1476), S. 1583 - 1588 (2001)
Neuhauser, M.; Forstmeier, W.; Bretz, F.: The distribution of extra-pair young within and among broods - a technique to calculate deviations from randomness. Journal of Avian Biology 32 (4), S. 358 - 363 (2001)
Bourski, O. V.; Forstmeier, W.: Does interspecific competition affect territorial distribution of birds? A long-term study on Siberian Phylloscopus warblers. Oikos 88 (2), S. 341 - 350 (2000)
Hormone steuern durch komplexe Regelkreise die Anpassungen von Organismen an ihre Umwelt. Verändern sich diese hormonellen Regelkreise schnell genug, um mit den weltweit immer schneller werdenden Umweltveränderungen mitzuhalten? Am Hormon Kortikosteron wird bei Vögeln gezeigt, dass verschiedene Arten unterschiedliche Konzentrationen aufweisen…