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Daniela Canestrari

Daniela Canestrari

D-Index & Metrics

Animal Science and Veterinary

D-Index
21
Citations
1673
World Ranking
3141
National Ranking
172

Overview

Daniela Canestrari is affiliated with the University of Leon in Spain. Their research spans various interconnected fields primarily within Agricultural and Biological Sciences and Environmental Science. This work encompasses several subfields, including Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Ecological Modeling, Developmental Biology, and Genetics.

Their scholarly contributions cover multiple research topics, with significant focus areas comprising:

  • Animal Behavior and Reproduction
  • Plant and Animal Studies
  • Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
  • Avian Ecology and Behavior
  • Species Distribution and Climate Change
  • Animal Vocal Communication and Behavior
  • Ecology and Biodiversity Studies

Canestrari has published research in a range of scientific venues, appearing most frequently in Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) with three publications, followed by Animal Behaviour with two, and contributions in Movement Ecology, Global Ecology and Conservation, and Frontiers in Environmental Science.

Their recent publications include:

  • "Female helpers signal their contribution to chick provisioning in a cooperatively breeding bird," 2021, Animal Behaviour
  • "Wolf Conservation and Management in Spain, An Open Debate," 2022, Frontiers in Environmental Science
  • "A benchmark for computational analysis of animal behavior, using animal-borne tags," 2024, Movement Ecology
  • "Cheating Cheaters: Social Monogamy but Genetic Polygamy in a Brood Parasite," 2020, Ardeola
  • "Large carnivore management at odds: Science or prejudice?" 2024, Global Ecology and Conservation

Collaborations have been an integral part of their career, with frequent coauthors including Vittorio Baglione, Eva Trapote, Víctor Moreno-González, Maddie Cusimano, and Benjamin Hoffman. These partnerships have contributed to the diversity and scope of their research output.

Best Publications

  • Kin Selection in Cooperative Alliances of Carrion Crows

    Vittorio Baglione;Daniela Canestrari;José M. Marcos;Jan Ekman

  • From Parasitism to Mutualism: Unexpected Interactions Between a Cuckoo and Its Host

    Daniela Canestrari;Diana Bolopo;Ted C. J. Turlings;Gregory Röder

  • Experimentally increased food resources in the natal territory promote offspring philopatry and helping in cooperatively breeding carrion crows

    Vittorio Baglione;Daniela Canestrari;José M Marcos;Jan Ekman

  • COOPERATIVELY BREEDING GROUPS OF CARRION CROW(CORVUS CORONE CORONE) IN NORTHERN SPAIN

    Vittorio Baglione;José M. Marcos;Daniela Canestrari;Daniela Canestrari

  • Linear and Stable Dominance Hierarchies in Cooperative Carrion Crows

    Elisa Chiarati;Daniela Canestrari;Rubén Vera;José M. Marcos

  • Direct fitness benefits of group living in a complex cooperative society of carrion crows Corvus corone corone

    Vittorio Baglione;José M Marcos;Daniela Canestrari;Daniela Canestrari;Jan Ekman

  • Effect of parentage and relatedness on the individual contribution to cooperative chick care in carrion crows Corvus corone corone

    Daniela Canestrari;José M. Marcos;Vittorio Baglione

  • Does year-round territoriality rather than habitat saturation explain delayed natal dispersal and cooperative breeding in the carrion crow?

    Vittorio Baglione;Vittorio Baglione;José M. Marcos;Daniela Canestrari;Daniela Canestrari;Michael Griesser;Michael Griesser

  • Cooperative breeding in carrion crows reduces the rate of brood parasitism by great spotted cuckoos

    Daniela Canestrari;José M. Marcos;Vittorio Baglione

  • Reproductive success increases with group size in cooperative carrion crows, Corvus corone corone

    Daniela Canestrari;José M. Marcos;Vittorio Baglione

  • Costs of chick provisioning in cooperatively breeding crows : an experimental study

    Daniela Canestrari;José M. Marcos;Vittorio Baglione

  • History, environment and social behaviour: experimentally induced cooperative breeding in the carrion crow

    Vittorio Baglione;Daniela Canestrari;Daniela Canestrari;José M. Marcos;Michael Griesser

  • Helpers at the nest compensate for reduced maternal investment in egg size in carrion crows.

    D. Canestrari;J. M. Marcos;V. Baglione

  • Lazy group members are substitute helpers in carrion crows.

    Vittorio Baglione;Daniela Canestrari;Daniela Canestrari;Elisa Chiarati;Ruben Vera

  • Helpers but not breeders adjust provisioning effort to year-round territory resource availability in carrion crows

    Daniela Canestrari;Elisa Chiarati;José M. Marcos;Jan Ekman

  • Subordinates benefit from exploratory dominants: response to novel food in cooperatively breeding carrion crows

    Elisa Chiarati;Daniela Canestrari;Rubén Vera;Vittorio Baglione

  • False feedings at the nests of carrion crows Corvus corone corone

    Daniela Canestrari;Daniela Canestrari;José M. Marcos;Vittorio Baglione;Vittorio Baglione

  • Evolution of tolerance by magpies to brood parasitism by great spotted cuckoos

    J. J. Soler;D. Martín-Gálvez;D. Martín-Gálvez;J. G. Martínez;M. Soler

  • Nepotistic access to food resources in cooperatively breeding carrion crows

    Elisa Chiarati;Daniela Canestrari;Marta Vila;Ruben Vera

  • False feeding: the trade-off between chick hunger and caregivers needs in cooperative crows

    Daniela Canestrari;Rubén Vera;Elisa Chiarati;José M. Marcos

Frequent Co-Authors

Jan Ekman
Jan Ekman Uppsala University
Manuel Soler
Manuel Soler University of Granada
Ted C. J. Turlings
Ted C. J. Turlings University of Neuchâtel
Michael Griesser
Michael Griesser University of Konstanz
Juan José Soler
Juan José Soler Spanish National Research Council
Giuseppe Bogliani
Giuseppe Bogliani University of Pavia
Walter D. Koenig
Walter D. Koenig University of California, Berkeley
Anders Pape Møller
Anders Pape Møller University of Paris-Saclay
Janis L. Dickinson
Janis L. Dickinson Cornell University

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