Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Northern Arizona University Home
Home
Profiles
Departments and Centers
Scholarly Works
Activities
Grants
Datasets
Prizes
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Evolutionary lability of food caching behaviour in mammals
Sean M. Mahoney, Bret Pasch
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
1
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Evolutionary lability of food caching behaviour in mammals'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Caching Behavior
100%
Food Caching
100%
Evolutionary Lability
100%
Population Density
85%
Brain Size
57%
Scatter-hoarding
42%
Taxonomic Scale
42%
Red Squirrel
28%
Marmotini
28%
Food Competition
28%
Larder Hoarding
28%
Cache Replacement
28%
Pilferage
28%
Body Size
14%
Comparative Analysis
14%
Phylogenetic Analysis
14%
Low-density Population
14%
Rodents
14%
Evolutionary
14%
Threatened Species
14%
Warm Climate
14%
Caching
14%
Behavior Evolution
14%
Endangered Species
14%
Resource Access
14%
Evolutionary Patterns
14%
Phylogenetic Scale
14%
Hoarding
14%
Ancestral States
14%
Sciuridae
14%
Ecological Factors
14%
Cold Climate
14%
Lability
14%
Diet Breadth
14%
High Population Density
14%
Food-hoarding
14%
Tamiasciurus Fremonti
14%
Brain Volume
14%
Test Keys
14%
Hippocampal Volume
14%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Evolution
100%
Population Density
100%
Caching Behavior
100%
Protocerebrum
62%
Cladistics
25%
Red Squirrel
25%
Sciuridae
12%
Endangered Species
12%
Tamiasciurus
12%