Publications of Ulrich Knief
All genres
Journal Article (13)
Journal Article
10 (23), pp. 13464 - 13475 (2020)
A test for meiotic drive in hybrids between Australian and Timor zebra finches. Ecology and Evolution
Journal Article
7 (1), coz056 (2019)
Traffic noise exposure depresses plasma corticosterone and delays offspring growth in breeding zebra finches. Conservation Physiology
Journal Article
30 (5), pp. 968 - 976 (2017)
Testing the phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis in the presence and absence of inbreeding. Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Journal Article
1 (8), pp. 1177 - 1184 (2017)
A sex-chromosome inversion causes strong overdominance for sperm traits that affect siring success. Nature Ecology & Evolution
Journal Article
118 (3), pp. 239 - 248 (2017)
Meiotic recombination shapes precision of pedigree- and marker-based estimates of inbreeding. Heredity
Journal Article
26 (5), pp. 1285 - 1305 (2017)
Association mapping of morphological traits in wild and captive zebra finches: Reliable within, but not between populations. Molecular Ecology
Journal Article
125 (4), pp. 757 - 768 (2016)
Mapping centromeres of microchromosomes in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) using half-tetrad analysis. Chromosoma: Biology of the Nucleus
Journal Article
17, 199 (2016)
Fitness consequences of polymorphic inversions in the zebra finch genome. Genome Biology
Journal Article
31 (4), pp. 315 - 326 (2016)
The ecology and evolutionary dynamics of meiotic drive. Trends in Ecology and Evolution
Journal Article
114 (4), pp. 397 - 403 (2015)
Quantifying realized inbreeding in wild and captive animal populations. Heredity
Journal Article
24 (15), pp. 3846 - 3859 (2015)
A prezygotic transmission distorter acting equally in female and male zebra finches Taeniopygia guttata. Molecular Ecology
Journal Article
156 (2), pp. 472 - 477 (2014)
Triploid ZZZ zebra finches Taeniopygia guttata exhibit abnormal sperm heads and poor reproductive performance. Ibis
Journal Article
21 (15), pp. 3704 - 3717 (2012)
QTL and quantitative genetic analysis of beak morphology reveals patterns of standing genetic variation in an Estrildid finch. Molecular Ecology