Stefan Greif

Stefan Greif
Tel Aviv University | TAU · Department of Zoology

PhD

About

29
Publications
9,354
Reads
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688
Citations
Citations since 2017
12 Research Items
494 Citations
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100
Additional affiliations
March 2016 - May 2016
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Position
  • PostDoc Position
March 2015 - present
Tel Aviv University
Position
  • Researcher
June 2013 - February 2014
Queen's University Belfast
Position
  • Researcher
Education
October 1999 - December 2006
University of Tuebingen
Field of study
  • Biology

Publications

Publications (29)
Article
Full-text available
Background Bats are remarkable in their dynamic control over body temperature, showing both hypothermia with torpor and hyperthermia during flight. Despite considerable research in understanding bats’ thermoregulation mechanisms, knowledge on the relationship between flight and body temperature in bats remains limited, possibly due to technological...
Article
Full-text available
Background Sensory systems acquire both external and internal information to guide behavior. Adjustments based on external input are much better documented and understood than internal-based sensory adaptations. When external input is not available, idiothetic—internal—cues become crucial for guiding behavior. Here, we take advantage of the rapid s...
Article
Full-text available
Every evening, from late spring to mid-summer, tens of thousands of hungry lactating female lesser long-nosed bats (Leptonycteris yerbabuenae) emerge from their roost and navigate over the Sonoran Desert, seeking for nectar and pollen [1, 2]. The bats roost in a huge maternal colony that is far from the foraging grounds but allows their pups to the...
Article
Full-text available
Background Multiple methods have been developed to infer behavioral states from animal movement data, but rarely has their accuracy been assessed from independent evidence, especially for location data sampled with high temporal resolution. Here we evaluate the performance of behavioral segmentation methods using acoustic recordings that monitor pr...
Article
Full-text available
Technological advances in the last 20 years have enabled researchers to develop increasingly sophisticated miniature devices (tags) that record an animal's behaviour not from an observational, external viewpoint, but directly on the animals themselves. So far, behavioural research with these tags has mostly been conducted using movement or accelera...
Article
Observations of animals feeding in aggregations are often interpreted as events of social foraging, but it can be difficult to determine whether the animals arrived at the foraging sites after collective search [1–4] or whether they found the sites by following a leader [5, 6] or even independently, aggregating as an artifact of food availability [...
Article
Building-blind bats Human-generated structures now dominate much of the planet, but they have existed for but a blink of an eye from an evolutionary perspective. Animal sensory systems evolved to navigate natural environments and so may not always be reliable in anthropogenic ones. Greif et al. show that echolocating bats appear to perceive smooth...
Article
Full-text available
Anthropogenic noise is of increasing concern to biologists and medical scientists. Its detrimental effects on human health have been well studied, with the high noise levels from air traffic being of particular concern. However, less is known about the effects of airport noise pollution on signal masking in wild animals. Here, we report a relations...
Data
Table S1. Bird species detected in acoustic censuses conducted in a forest at Tegel airport and a control forest 4 km away from the airport. Table S2. Species‐specific results of linear mixed models with the dawn song onset in relation to the beginning of civil twilight as predicted variable and daytime noise levels or site as predictor variables...
Article
Full-text available
In food web studies, hydrogen stable isotope ratios (δ2H) are increasingly used as endogenous markers to quantify the relative importance of allochthonous input of organic material into aquatic ecosystems. Yet, it is unclear if differences in δ2H values between aquatic and terrestrial food webs translate into corresponding differences of δ2H values...
Article
Full-text available
Animals can call on a multitude of sensory information to orient and navigate. One such cue is the pattern of polarized light in the sky, which for example can be used by birds as a geographical reference to calibrate other cues in the compass mechanism. Here we demonstrate that the female greater mouse-eared bat (Myotis myotis) uses polarization c...
Article
Bats are well known for species richness and ecological diversity, and thus, they provide a good opportunity to study relationships and interaction between species. To assess interactions, we consider distinct traits that are probably to be triggered by niche shape and evolutionary processes. We present data on the trophic niche differentiation bet...
Article
Full-text available
The idea that copulation might increase predation risk is a classic suggestion [1-3], but empirical evidence to support it is surprisingly scarce. While some early work found decreased vulnerability to predation during mating [2], two lab and one very recent field study documented increased predation during mating in freshwater amphipods [4], water...
Article
Full-text available
Changes in dietary preferences in animal species play a pivotal role in niche specialization. Here, we investigate how divergence of foraging behaviour affects the trophic position of animals and thereby their role for ecosystem processes. As a model, we used two closely related bat species, Myotis myotis and M. blythii oxygnathus, that are morphol...
Data
A Miniopterus schreibersii drinking from a real water surface. Note the careful approach with a final head down movement. With the mouth open the bat takes up a loading of water and flies upwards again.
Data
A Miniopterus schreibersii trying to drink from a metal surface. Note the exact same sequence of movements compared to drinking from a real water surface (Supplementary Movie 1). After a careful approach with the head extending towards the surface, the bat tries to take up water with the open mouth.
Article
Full-text available
In the course of their lives, most animals must find different specific habitat and microhabitat types for survival and reproduction. Yet, in vertebrates, little is known about the sensory cues that mediate habitat recognition. In free flying bats the echolocation of insect-sized point targets is well understood, whereas how they recognize and clas...
Article
Full-text available
Foraging behaviour of bats is supposedly largely influenced by the high costs of flapping flight. Yet our understanding of flight energetics focuses mostly on continuous horizontal forward flight at intermediate speeds. Many bats, however, perform manoeuvring flights at suboptimal speeds when foraging. For example, members of the genus Rhinolophus...
Article
Full-text available
When insects walk, they generally produce sounds. These can reveal the walkers' presence and location to potential predators such as owls, bats and nocturnal primates. Additionally, predators might extract information on taxon, palatability, size or profitability from the rustling sounds. In contrast to ear morphology, hearing physiology and psycho...
Article
Full-text available
Homing behaviour in the New Zealand long‐tailed bat (Chalinolobus tuberculatus), a temperate insectivorous species, was investigated at Grand Canyon Cave, central North Island. A pilot study of nine adult male bats was conducted to determine whether use of the cave was regular enough for a homing study. Eight bats returned to the cave over the 3‐we...

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