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The importance of wild populations in studies of animal temperament
Gabrielle A. Archard
, Victoria Ann Braithwaite-Read
Ecosystem Science and Management
Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Review article
›
peer-review
118
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Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
Absence of Evidence
16%
Adaptation
16%
Animal Temperament
100%
Behavioral Differences
16%
Behavioral Ecology
16%
Behavioral Variation
16%
Between-person
16%
Captive Animals
16%
Captive-bred
16%
Ecological Function
16%
Environmental Variability
16%
Evolutionary Ecology
16%
Evolutionary Function
16%
Fitness Consequences
16%
Fitness Function
16%
Gene-environment Interaction
16%
Heritability
16%
Interspecific Comparison
16%
Intraspecific
16%
Learning Development
16%
Multiple Axes
16%
Natural Environment
16%
Potential Problems
16%
Repeatability
16%
Selection Pressure
16%
Temperament
100%
Temperament Test
16%
Wild Animals
16%
Wild Population
100%
Immunology and Microbiology
Breed
50%
Evolution
100%
Heritability
50%
Wild Animal
50%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Breed
50%
Evolution
100%
Wild Animal
50%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Breed
10%
Captive Animals
10%
Evolution
20%
Heritability
10%
Repeatability
10%
Selection Pressure
10%
Temperament
100%
Wild Animal
10%