OpenAlex Citation Counts

OpenAlex Citations Logo

OpenAlex is a bibliographic catalogue of scientific papers, authors and institutions accessible in open access mode, named after the Library of Alexandria. It's citation coverage is excellent and I hope you will find utility in this listing of citing articles!

If you click the article title, you'll navigate to the article, as listed in CrossRef. If you click the Open Access links, you'll navigate to the "best Open Access location". Clicking the citation count will open this listing for that article. Lastly at the bottom of the page, you'll find basic pagination options.

Requested Article:

Wood warblers learn to recognize mobbing calls of an unfamiliar species from heterospecific tutors
Jakub Szymkowiak
Animal Behaviour (2020) Vol. 171, pp. 1-11
Closed Access | Times Cited: 9

Showing 9 citing articles:

Species diversity and interspecific information flow
Eben Goodale, Robert D. Magrath
Biological reviews/Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society (2024) Vol. 99, Iss. 3, pp. 999-1014
Closed Access | Times Cited: 7

Shared predators between primate groups and mixed species bird flocks: the potential for forest‐wide eavesdropping networks
Ari E. Martínez, Eliseo Parra, Juan Pablo Gómez, et al.
Oikos (2021) Vol. 2022, Iss. 10
Closed Access | Times Cited: 16

Deterioration of nature's information webs in the Anthropocene
Jakub Szymkowiak, Kenneth A. Schmidt
Oikos (2021) Vol. 2022, Iss. 10
Closed Access | Times Cited: 9

Eavesdropping on conspecific alarm calls links birds across territory borders into a population-wide information network
Jakub Szymkowiak
Animal Behaviour (2022) Vol. 192, pp. 85-93
Closed Access | Times Cited: 4

Behavioral plasticity in two endemic rodents from the Andes Mountains: strategies for thermal and energetic balance
Emmanuel Fabián Ruperto, Paula Taraborelli, Josefina Menéndez, et al.
Mammalian Biology (2022) Vol. 102, Iss. 5-6, pp. 1661-1671
Closed Access | Times Cited: 1

Large-scale spatial pattern of bird responses to a potential predator suggests that predator-specific mobbing is a plastic trait
Benjamín Jarčuška
Journal of Ethology (2023) Vol. 41, Iss. 2, pp. 153-162
Closed Access

Page 1

Scroll to top