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Anindya Sinha Professor, Animal Behaviour and Cognition Programme All-male groups in Asian elephants: A novel, adaptive social strategy in increasingly anthropogenic landscapes of southern India. Scientific Reports 9: 8678. |
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Anindya Sinha, V V Binoy Can living with an alien invasive fish, Tilapia, influence the shoaling decision-making and exploratory behaviour of an air-breathing freshwater fish, the climbing perch? bioRxiv 839563. https://doi.org/10.1101/839563 |
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Anindya Sinha, V V Binoy Inter-ecosystem variation in the food-collection behaviour of climbing perch Anabas testudineus, a freshwater fish. bioRxiv 573600 https://doi.org/10.1101/573600 |
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Anindya Sinha, Shreedhar Vijayakrishna Professor, Animal Behaviour and Cognition Programme Human-captive elephant relationships in Kerala: Historical perspectives and current scenarios. Gajah 50: 29-35. |
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Anindya Sinha Professor, Animal Behaviour and Cognition Programme Sharing from the same bowl: Resource partitioning between sympatric macaque species in the Western Himalaya, India. International Journal of Primatology 40: 356-373. |
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Anindya Sinha, Shreejata Gupta Professor, Animal Behaviour and Cognition Programme Gestural communication of wild bonnet macaques in the Bandipur National Park, southern India. Behavioural Processes 168: 103956. |
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Anindya Sinha, Maan Barua Professor, Animal Behaviour and Cognition Programme Animating the urban: An ethological and geographical conversation. Social and Cultural Geography 20: 1160-1180. |
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Sudha Mahalingam The travel gods must be crazy. New Delhi: Penguin Random House India |