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Animal Science and Veterinary

D-Index
31
Citations
3139
World Ranking
2330
National Ranking
105

Overview

Isabelle Charrier is affiliated with the University of Paris-Saclay in France. Their research primarily focuses on environmental science with a strong emphasis on marine animal studies, encompassing 96 publications in this area. This work intersects with biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology fields, having contributed to 38 publications in these domains.

Their expertise covers several subfields including ecology, developmental biology, oceanography, and ecology, evolution, behavior, and systematics. Specific interests are reflected in various topics such as animal vocal communication and behavior, underwater acoustics research, animal behavior and reproduction, avian ecology and behavior, Arctic and Antarctic ice dynamics, and infant health and development.

Recent notable publications by Isabelle Charrier include:

  • "The genesis of giants: behavioural ontogeny of male northern elephant seals," 2020, Animal Behaviour
  • "First evidence of underwater vocalizations in green sea turtles Chelonia mydas," 2022, Endangered Species Research
  • "Maritime traffic trends around the southern tip of Africa - Did marine noise pollution contribute to the local penguins' collapse?," 2022, The Science of The Total Environment
  • "Assessment of the impact of anthropogenic airborne noise on the behaviour of Cape fur seals during the breeding season in Namibia," 2022, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
  • "Extreme ecological constraints lead to high degree of individual stereotypy in the vocal repertoire of the Cape fur seal (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus)," 2021, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology

Isabelle Charrier frequently collaborates with several researchers, including:

  • Chloé Huetz
  • Mathilde Martin
  • Tess Gridley
  • Simon H. Elwen
  • Olivier Adam

Common venues for Isabelle Charrier's publications include:

  • Marine Mammal Science
  • Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
  • PeerJ
  • SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Endangered Species Research

Best Publications

  • How does a fur seal mother recognize the voice of her pup? An experimental study of Arctocephalus tropicalis.

    Isabelle Charrier;Nicolas Mathevon;Nicolas Mathevon;Pierre Jouventin

  • Mother's voice recognition by seal pups

    Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier;Nicolas Mathevon;Nicolas Mathevon;Pierre Jouventin

  • Vocal signature recognition of mothers by fur seal pups

    Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier;Nicolas Mathevon;Nicolas Mathevon;Pierre Jouventin

  • Note types and coding in parid vocalizations. I: The chick-a-dee call of the black-capped chickadee (Poecile atricapillus)

    Isabelle Charrier;Laurie L. Bloomfield;Christopher B. Sturdy

  • Acoustic Communication in a Black-Headed Gull Colony: How Do Chicks Identify Their Parents?

    Isabelle Charrier;Nicolas Mathevon;Pierre Jouventin;Thierry Aubin

  • Individual identity coding depends on call type in the South Polar skua Catharacta maccormicki

    Isabelle Charrier;Pierre Jouventin;Nicolas Mathevon;Thierry Aubin

  • Potential for individual recognition in acoustic signals: a comparative study of two gulls with different nesting patterns

    Nicolas Mathevon;Nicolas Mathevon;Isabelle Charrier;Pierre Jouventin

  • Mother-calf vocal communication in Atlantic walrus: a first field experimental study.

    Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier;Thierry Aubin;Thierry Aubin;Nicolas Mathevon;Nicolas Mathevon

  • Vocal recognition of mothers by Australian sea lion pups: individual signature and environmental constraints

    Isabelle Charrier;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Robert G. Harcourt

  • Call-based species recognition in black-capped chickadees.

    Isabelle Charrier;Christopher B. Sturdy

  • INDIVIDUAL VOCAL IDENTITY IN MOTHER AND PUP AUSTRALIAN SEA LIONS (NEOPHOCA CINEREA)

    Isabelle Charrier;Robert G. Harcourt

  • Social olfaction in marine mammals : wild female Australian sea lions can identify their pup's scent.

    Benjamin J. Pitcher;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Robert G. Harcourt;Benoist Schaal;Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier

  • Temporal and Spectral Analyses Reveal Individual Variation in a Non‐Vocal Acoustic Display: The Drumming Display of the Ruffed Grouse (Bonasa umbellus, L.)

    Maxime Garcia;Maxime Garcia;Maxime Garcia;Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier;Drew Rendall;Andrew N. Iwaniuk

  • INDIVIDUALITY IN THE VOICE OF FUR SEAL FEMALES: AN ANALYSIS STUDY OF THE PUP ATTRACTION CALL IN ARCTOCEPHALUS TROPICALIS

    Isabelle Charrier;Nicolas Mathevon;Pierre Jouventin

  • Rapid onset of maternal vocal recognition in a colonially breeding mammal, the Australian sea lion.

    Benjamin J. Pitcher;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Robert G. Harcourt;Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier

  • Individual identity encoding and environmental constraints in vocal recognition of pups by Australian sea lion mothers

    Benjamin J. Pitcher;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Robert G. Harcourt;Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier

  • The behavioural response of Australian fur seals to motor boat noise.

    Joy S. Tripovich;Sophie Hall-Aspland;Isabelle Charrier;John P. Y. Arnould

  • Note types and coding in parid vocalizations. II: The chick-a-dee call of the mountain chickadee (Poecile gambeli)

    Laurie L. Bloomfield;Isabelle Charrier;Christopher B. Sturdy

  • Fur seal mothers memorize subsequent versions of developing pups' calls: adaptation to long-term recognition or evolutionary by-product?

    Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier;Nicolas Mathevon;Nicolas Mathevon;Pierre Jouventin

  • Multimodal mother–offspring recognition: the relative importance of sensory cues in a colonial mammal

    Kaja Wierucka;Kaja Wierucka;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Benjamin J. Pitcher;Robert G. Harcourt;Isabelle Charrier

  • Rival assessment among northern elephant seals: evidence of associative learning during male-male contests.

    Caroline Casey;Isabelle Charrier;Nicolas Mathevon;Colleen Reichmuth

  • Acoustic Analysis of Airborne, Underwater, and Amphibious Mother Attraction Calls by Wild Harbor Seal Pups (Phoca vitulina)

    Caroline C. Sauvé;Gwénaël Beauplet;Mike O. Hammill;Mike O. Hammill;Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier

  • Acoustic Mechanisms of Note-Type Perception in Black-Capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapillus) Calls

    Isabelle Charrier;Tiffany T.-Y. Lee;Laurie L. Bloomfield;Christopher B. Sturdy

  • Vocal identity and species recognition in male Australian sea lions, Neophoca cinerea.

    Jessica Gwilliam;Isabelle Charrier;Isabelle Charrier;Robert G. Harcourt

  • Potential for individual recognition in acoustic signals: a comparative study of two gulls with different nesting patterns Reconnaissance individuelle par signaux acoustiques : comparaison entre deux espèces de Laridæ différant par leur écologie de nidification

    Nicolas Mathevon;Isabelle Charrier;Pierre Jouventin

Frequent Co-Authors

Nicolas Mathevon
Nicolas Mathevon Jean Monnet University
Robert Harcourt
Robert Harcourt Macquarie University
Thierry Aubin
Thierry Aubin University of Paris-Saclay
Pierre Jouventin
Pierre Jouventin Centre national de la recherche scientifique, CNRS
Benoist Schaal
Benoist Schaal University of Burgundy
Andrew N. Iwaniuk
Andrew N. Iwaniuk University of Lethbridge
John P. Y. Arnould
John P. Y. Arnould Deakin University
Tracey L. Rogers
Tracey L. Rogers University of New South Wales
Pierre A. Pistorius
Pierre A. Pistorius Nelson Mandela University
Myron C. Baker
Myron C. Baker Colorado State University

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