Personal information

Austria

Activities

Works (7)

Multiple paternity in a population of free-living edible dormice (Glis glis)

Mammalian Biology
2018-11 | Journal article
Contributors: Katharina Weber; Franz Hoelzl; Jessica S. Cornils; Steve Smith; Claudia Bieber; Boglarka Balint; Thomas Ruf
Source: check_circle
Crossref

The insensitive dormouse: reproduction skipping is not caused by chronic stress in Glis glis

Journal of Experimental Biology
2018-01-01 | Journal article
Contributors: Jessica S. Cornils; Franz Hoelzl; Nikolaus Huber; Richard Zink; Hanno Gerritsmann; Claudia Bieber; Franz Schwarzenberger; Thomas Ruf
Source: check_circle
Crossref

Edible dormice (Glis glis) avoid areas with a high density of their preferred food plant - the European beech

Frontiers in Zoology
2017-12 | Journal article
Contributors: Jessica S. Cornils; Franz Hoelzl; Birgit Rotter; Claudia Bieber; Thomas Ruf
Source: check_circle
Crossref

Telomere dynamics in free-living edible dormice (Glis glis): The impact of hibernation and food supply

Journal of Experimental Biology
2016 | Journal article
EID:

2-s2.0-84984680090

Contributors: Hoelzl, F.; Cornils, J.S.; Smith, S.; Moodley, Y.; Ruf, T.
Source: Self-asserted source
Jessica Svea Cornils via Scopus - Elsevier

Telomeres are elongated in older individuals in a hibernating rodent, the edible dormouse (Glis glis)

Scientific Reports
2016 | Journal article
EID:

2-s2.0-84997272263

Contributors: Hoelzl, F.; Smith, S.; Cornils, J.S.; Aydinonat, D.; Bieber, C.; Ruf, T.
Source: Self-asserted source
Jessica Svea Cornils via Scopus - Elsevier

How to spend the summer? Free-living dormice (Glis glis) can hibernate for 11 months in non-reproductive years

Journal of Comparative Physiology B: Biochemical, Systemic, and Environmental Physiology
2015 | Journal article
EID:

2-s2.0-84946487089

Contributors: Hoelzl, F.; Bieber, C.; Cornils, J.S.; Gerritsmann, H.; Stalder, G.L.; Walzer, C.; Ruf, T.
Source: Self-asserted source
Jessica Svea Cornils via Scopus - Elsevier

Population density and habitat preferences of the Black-cheeked Ant-tanager Habia atrimaxillaris

Bird Conservation International
2015 | Journal article
EID:

2-s2.0-84938774257

Contributors: Cornils, J.S.; Riedl, I.; Fricke, J.; Katz, M.; Schulze, C.H.
Source: Self-asserted source
Jessica Svea Cornils via Scopus - Elsevier

Peer review (1 review for 1 publication/grant)

Review activity for Acta theriologica. (1)