Fabre, Anne-Claire Odile

Up a level
Export as [feed] RSS
Group by: Date | Item Type | Refereed | No Grouping
Jump to: Yes

Yes

Monclús-Gonzalo, Oriol; Alba, David M; Duhamel, Anaïs; Fabre, Anne-Claire; Marigó, Judit (2023). Early euprimates already had a diverse locomotor repertoire: Evidence from ankle bone morphology. Journal of human evolution, 181, p. 103395. Elsevier 10.1016/j.jhevol.2023.103395

Goswami, Anjali; Noirault, Eve; Coombs, Ellen J; Clavel, Julien; Fabre, Anne-Claire; Halliday, Thomas J D; Churchill, Morgan; Curtis, Abigail; Watanabe, Akinobu; Simmons, Nancy B; Beatty, Brian L; Geisler, Jonathan H; Fox, David L; Felice, Ryan N (2023). Developmental origin underlies evolutionary rate variation across the placental skull. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 378(1880), p. 20220083. Royal Society of London 10.1098/rstb.2022.0083

Fabre, A.-C.; Portela Miguez, R.; Wall, C. E.; Peckre, L. R.; Ehmke, E.; Boistel, R. (2023). A review of nose picking in primates with new evidence of its occurrence in Daubentonia madagascariensis. Journal of zoology, 319(2), pp. 91-98. Wiley-Blackwell 10.1111/jzo.13034

Peckre, Louise R; Fabre, Anne-Claire; Wall, Christine E; Pouydebat, Emmanuelle; Whishaw, Ian Q (2023). Evolutionary History of food Withdraw Movements in Primates: Food Withdraw is Mediated by Nonvisual Strategies in 22 Species of Strepsirrhines. Evolutionary biology, 50(2), pp. 206-223. Springer 10.1007/s11692-023-09598-0

Rothier, Priscila S; Fabre, Anne-Claire; Clavel, Julien; Benson, Roger BJ; Herrel, Anthony (2023). Mammalian forelimb evolution is driven by uneven proximal-to-distal morphological diversity. eLife, 12, pp. 1-18. eLife Sciences Publications 10.7554/eLife.81492

Goswami, Anjali; Noirault, Eve; Coombs, Ellen J; Clavel, Julien; Fabre, Anne-Claire Odile; Halliday, Thomas J D; Churchill, Morgan; Curtis, Abigail; Watanabe, Akinobu; Simmons, Nancy B; Beatty, Brian L; Geisler, Jonathan H; Fox, David L; Felice, Ryan N (2022). Attenuated evolution of mammals through the Cenozoic. Science, 378(6618), pp. 377-383. American Association for the Advancement of Science 10.1126/science.abm7525

Provide Feedback