John Morgan Ratcliffe
Affiliations: | University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada |
Area:
Bats, acoustic communication, insectsGoogle:
"John Ratcliffe"Mean distance: 14.35 (cluster 17) | S | N | B | C | P |
Parents
Sign in to add mentorBennett Galef | research assistant | McMaster University | |
Sara Shettleworth | grad student | University of Toronto | |
Melville Brock Fenton | grad student | 2005 | University of Western Ontario, Canada |
James Howard Fullard | grad student | 2005 | University of Toronto |
Annemarie Surlykke | post-doc | 2007- | University of Southern Denmark |
Ronald R. Hoy | post-doc | 2005-2007 | Cornell |
BETA: Related publications
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Publications
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Drinkwater E, Allen WL, Endler JA, et al. (2022) A synthesis of deimatic behaviour. Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 97: 2237-2267 |
Guy C, Ratcliffe JM, Mideo N. (2020) The influence of bat ecology on viral diversity and reservoir status. Ecology and Evolution. 10: 5748-5758 |
Mayberry HW, McMillan MR, Chochinov AV, et al. (2020) Potential foraging niche release in insectivorous bat species relatively unaffected by white-nose syndrome? Canadian Journal of Zoology. 98: 667-680 |
Hone DWE, Ratcliffe JM, Riskin DK, et al. (2020) Unique near isometric ontogeny in the pterosaur Rhamphorhynchus suggests hatchlings could fly Lethaia |
Mayberry HW, Faure PA, Ratcliffe JM. (2019) Sonar strobe groups and buzzes are produced before powered flight is achieved in the juvenile big brown bat, . The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Gordon R, Ivens S, Ammerman LK, et al. (2019) Molecular diet analysis finds an insectivorous desert bat community dominated by resource sharing despite diverse echolocation and foraging strategies. Ecology and Evolution. 9: 3117-3129 |
Guy C, Thiagavel J, Mideo N, et al. (2019) Phylogeny matters: revisiting 'a comparison of bats and rodents as reservoirs of zoonotic viruses'. Royal Society Open Science. 6: 181182 |
Dixon MM, Hulgard K, Ratcliffe JM, et al. (2019) Habituation and ecological salience: insights into the foraging ecology of the fringed-lipped bat, Trachops cirrhosus Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 73 |
Carter GG, Forss S, Page RA, et al. (2018) Younger vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus) are more likely than adults to explore novel objects. Plos One. 13: e0196889 |
Patriquin KJ, Kohles JE, Page RA, et al. (2018) Bats without borders: Predators learn novel prey cues from other predatory species. Science Advances. 4: eaaq0579 |