Eric Warrant
Overview
Explore the profile of Eric Warrant including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
Author names and details appear as published. Due to indexing inconsistencies, multiple individuals may share a name, and a single author may have variations. MedLuna displays this data as publicly available, without modification or verification
Snapshot
Snapshot
Articles
46
Citations
750
Followers
0
Related Specialties
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Published In
Affiliations
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Tao Y, Lucas M, Perera A, Teague S, McIntyre T, Ogunwa T, et al.
Biomimetics (Basel)
. 2024 Oct;
9(10).
PMID: 39451825
Moving in straight lines is a behaviour that enables organisms to search for food, move away from threats, and ultimately seek suitable environments in which to survive and reproduce. This...
2.
Tao Y, Perera A, Teague S, McIntyre T, Warrant E, Chahl J
Biomimetics (Basel)
. 2024 Jul;
9(7).
PMID: 39056816
Many species rely on celestial cues as a reliable guide for maintaining heading while navigating. In this paper, we propose a method that extracts the Milky Way (MW) shape as...
3.
Chen H, Li M, Manefjord H, Travers P, Salvador J, Muller L, et al.
iScience
. 2024 Apr;
27(5):109588.
PMID: 38646171
The seasonal migrations of insects involve a substantial displacement of biomass with significant ecological and economic consequences for regions of departure and arrival. Remote sensors have played a pivotal role...
4.
Wallace J, Reber T, Dreyer D, Beaton B, Zeil J, Warrant E
Front Insect Sci
. 2024 Mar;
3:1240400.
PMID: 38469488
The ability to measure flying insect activity and abundance is important for ecologists, conservationists and agronomists alike. However, existing methods are laborious and produce data with low temporal resolution (e.g....
5.
Wallace J, Dreyer D, Reber T, Khaldy L, Mathews-Hunter B, Green K, et al.
Front Insect Sci
. 2024 Mar;
3:1230501.
PMID: 38469465
Introduction: The Bogong moth is well known for its remarkable annual round-trip migration from its breeding grounds across eastern and southern Australia to its aestivation sites in the Australian Alps,...
6.
Nilsson D, Johnsen S, Warrant E
Curr Biol
. 2023 Oct;
33(20):R1100-R1105.
PMID: 37875092
Vertebrates and cephalopods are the two major animal groups that view the world through sophisticated camera-type eyes. There are of course exceptions: nautiloid cephalopods have more simply built pinhole eyes....
7.
Honkanen A, Hensgen R, Kannan K, Adden A, Warrant E, Wcislo W, et al.
J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol
. 2023 Apr;
209(4):563-591.
PMID: 37017717
Spatial orientation is a prerequisite for most behaviors. In insects, the underlying neural computations take place in the central complex (CX), the brain's navigational center. In this region different streams...
8.
Warrant E, Somanathan H
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
. 2022 Sep;
377(1862):20210285.
PMID: 36058247
The ability to see colour at night is known only from a handful of animals. First discovered in the elephant hawk moth , nocturnal colour vision is now known from...
9.
Li M, Seinsche C, Jansson S, Hernandez J, Rota J, Warrant E, et al.
J R Soc Interface
. 2022 Jun;
19(191):20220256.
PMID: 35730175
There are hundreds of thousands of moth species with crucial ecological roles that are often obscured by their nocturnal lifestyles. The pigmentation and appearance of moths are dominated by cryptic...
10.
Heinze S, El Jundi B, Berg B, Homberg U, Menzel R, Pfeiffer K, et al.
Elife
. 2021 Aug;
10.
PMID: 34427185
Insect neuroscience generates vast amounts of highly diverse data, of which only a small fraction are findable, accessible and reusable. To promote an open data culture, we have therefore developed...