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Home>profiles>jameshare

James Hare

Profile
Select Publications
James Hare
Professor Emeritus
(204) 391-3736
James.Hare@umanitoba.ca
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/James-Hare-4/research

Research and Teaching Interests

Evolution and maintenance of sociality, Social behaviour, costs and benefits of group living, adaptive sex allocation, social parasitism, kin, neighbour and individual recognition, proximate mechanisms of recognition, antipredator behaviour, alarm-calling, vocal communication, chemical defense, emphasis on field studies of ground-dwelling squirrels and laboratory studies of slave-making ants.

  • Bairos-Novak, K., Ryan, C.P., Freeman, A.R., Anderson, W.G. and Hare, J.F. (2017).Like mother, like daughter: Heritability of female Richardson’s ground squirrel (Urocitellus richardsonii) cortisol stress responses. Current Zoology 63.
  • Pero, E.M. and Hare, J.F. (2017). Demography and Life History of a Manitoba, Delta Marsh Population of Franklin’s Ground Squirrels (Poliocitellus franklinii). Canadian Wildlife Biology & Management 6 (1), 42-52.
  • Dakin, R., McCrossan, O., Hare, J.F., Montgomerie, R. and Amador Kane, S. (2016).Biomechanics of the peacock’s display: how feather structure and resonance facilitate multimodal signaling. PLoSOne 11 (4), e0152759.
  • Wood, T.J. and Hare, J.F. (2016). Blue jays (Cyanocitta cristata) do not spontaneously eavesdrop on red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) squeals to locate food.Proceedings of Manitoba’s Undergraduate Science and Engineering Research 2, 1-14.
  • Campobello, D., Hare, J.F., and Sarà, M. (2015). Social phenotype extended to communities: Expanded multilevel social selection analysis reveals fitness consequences of interspecific interactions. Evolution 69, 916-925.
  • Freeman, A.R. & Hare J.F. (2015). Infrasound in mating displays: a peacock’s tale.Animal Behavior 102, 241-250.
  • Hare, A.J., Waheed, A., Hare, J.F. and Anderson, W.G. (2015). Cortisol and catecholamine responses to social context and a chemical alarm signal in juvenile lake sturgeon, Acipenser fulvescens. Canadian Journal of Zoology 93, 605-613.
  • Newediuk, L.J., Waters, I. and Hare, J.F. (2015). Aspen Parkland Pasture Altered by Richardson’s Ground Squirrel (Urocitellus richardsonii Sabine) Activity: The Good, the Bad, and the Not So Ugly?. Canadian Field-Naturalist 129 (4), 331-341.
  • Clary, D., Skyner, L.J., Ryan, C.P., Gardiner, L.E., Anderson, W.G. and Hare, J.F. (2014). Shyness-Boldness, but not Exploration, Predicts Glucocorticoid Stress Response in Richardson’s Ground Squirrels (Urocitellus richardsonii). Ethology 120, 1101-1109.
  • Elliott, K.H., Chivers, L.S., Bessey, L., Gaston, A.J., Hatch, S., Kato, A., Osborne, O., Ropert-Coudert, Y., Speakman, J.R. and Hare, J.F. (2014). Windscapes shape seabird instantaneous energy costs but adult behavior buffers impact on offspring. Movement Ecology 2, 17.
  • Elliott, K.H., Hare, J.F., Le Vaillant, M., Gaston, A.J., Ropert-Coudert, Y. and Anderson, W.G. (2014). Ageing gracefully: physiology but not behaviour declines with age in a diving seabird. Functional Ecology.
  • Elliott, K.H., Le Vaillant, M., Kato, A., Gaston, A.J., Ropert-Coudert, Y., Hare, J.F., Speakman, J.R. and Croll, D. (2014). Age-related variation in energy expenditure in a longlived bird within the envelope of an energy ceiling. Journal of Animal Ecology 83, 136-146. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12126
  • Elliott, K.H., O’Reilly, K.M, Hatch, S.A., Gaston, A.J., Hare, J.F. and Anderson, W.G. (2014). The prudent parent meets old age: a high stress response in very old seabirds supports the terminal restraint hypothesis. Hormones and Behavior 66, 828-837.
  • Hare, J.F., Campbell, K.L. and Senkiw, R.W. (2014). Catch the wave: prairie dogs assess neighbours’ awareness using contagious displays. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 281. doi 10.1098/rspb.2013.2153
  • Hare, J.F., Ryan, C.P., Enright, C., Gardiner, L.E., Skyner, L.J., Berkvens, C.N. and Anderson, W.G. (2014). Validation of a radioimmunoassay-based fecal corticosteroid assay for Richardson’s ground squirrels (Urocitellus richardsonii). Current Zoology 60, 591-601.
  • Ryan, C.P., Anderson, W.G., Berkvens, C. and Hare, J.F. (2014). Maternal gestational cortisol and testosterone are associated with trade offs in offspring sex and number in a free-living rodent (Urocitellus richardsonii). PLoSOne 9 (10), e111052.
  • Elliott, K.H., Welcker, J., Gaston, A.J., Hatch, S.A., Palace, V., Hare, J.F., Speakman, J.R. and Anderson, W.G. (2013). Thyroid hormones correlate with resting metabolic rate, not daily energy expenditure, in two charadriiform seabirds. Biology Open 2, 580-586. doi:10.1242/bio.20134358
  • Stoesz, B.M., Hare, J.F. and Snow, W.M. (2013). Neurophysiological mechanisms underlying affiliative social behaviour: Insights from comparative research.Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 37, 123-132.
  • Campobello, D., Sarà, M. & Hare, J.F. (2012). Under my wing: lesser kestrels and jackdaws derive reciprocal benefits in mixed-species colonies. Behavioral Ecology 23, 425-433.
  • Hare, J.F. (2012). Vertebrate social communication: ecological and evolutionary insights from social signals. Current Zoology 58, 677-679.
  • Hare, J.F. and Warkentin, K.J. (2012). The song remains the same: juvenile Richardson’s ground squirrels do not respond differentially to mother’s or colony member’s alarm calls. Current Zoology 58, 773-780.
  • Ryan CP, Anderson WG, Gardiner LE, Hare JF (2012). Stress-induced sex ratios in ground squirrels: support for a mechanistic hypothesis. Behavioral Ecology 23, 160-167.
  • Sadaf N. Zubair, Stephan J. Peake, James F. Hare and W. Gary Anderson (2012). The effect of temperature and substrate on the development of the cortisol stress response in the lake sturgeon, Acipenser fulvescens, Rafinesque (1817). Environmental Biology of Fishes 93, 577-587.
  • Swan, D.C. & Hare, J.F. (2012). Larval recognition by Temnothorax longispinosus and T. ambiguus hosts of the slave making ant Protomognathus americanus (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) revisited: colony level referent ensures conspecific preference. Insectes Sociaux 59, 511-517.
  • Freeman, A.R. & Hare, J.F. (2011). Infrasound in the flutter-jump display of Capercaillie (Tetrao urogallus): signal or artefact?. Journal of Ornithology 152, 815-816.
  • Thompson, A.B. & Hare, J.F. (2010). Neighbourhood watch: multiple alarm callers communicate directional predator movement in Richardson’s ground squirrels, Spermophilus richardsonii. Animal Behaviour 80, 269-275.
  • Jameson, J.W. & Hare, J.F. (2009). Group-Specific Signatures in the Echolocation Calls of Female Little Brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) are Not an Artefact of Clutter at the Roost Entrance. Acta Chiropterologica 11, 163-172.
  • Catania, K.C., Hare, J.F. and Campbell, K.L. (2008). Water shrews detect movement, shape, and smell to find prey underwater. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science U.S.A. 105, 571-576.
  • Sloan, J.L. and Hare, J.F. (2008). The more the scarier: adult Richardson’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) assess response urgency via the number of alarm signalers. Ethology 114, 436-443.
  • Swan, D.C. and Hare, J.F. (2008). Signaler and receiver ages do not affect responses to Richardson’s ground squirrel alarm calls. Journal of Mammalogy 89 (4), 889-894.
  • Swan, D.C. and Hare, J.F. (2008). The first cut is the deepest: primary syllables of Richardson’s ground squirrel (Spermophilus richardsonii) repeated calls alert receivers.Animal Behaviour 76, 47-54.
  • Campobello, D. & Hare, J.F. (2007). Information transfer determined by association of neighbours in European bee-eaters (Merops apiaster). Ethology, Ecology & Evolution 19, 191-197.
  • Hare, J.F. & Murie, J.O. (2007). Ecology, kinship and ground squirrel sociality: insights from comparative analyses, Chapter 29, pp. 317-327. University of Chicago Press.
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