Jennie Rinehimer
- 1-800-422-1782 x7478
- jcarr2FREEwashcoll
- Toll S120
Office Hours
Change each semester, please email for scheduling
Education
B.S., Juniata College, 2008; Ph.D., Indiana State University, 2013.
Research
My research focuses on avian behavioral ecology. I am particularly interested in how predators influence the behavior of their prey and resultant trade-offs associated with avoiding or reducing predation risk. I have addressed these predation trade-offs in a variety of contexts and species, including how risk influences thermoregulation (ruby-throated hummingbirds, New World sparrows, mourning doves), foraging (hummingbirds and sparrows), parental care (field sparrows), and lekking behavior (white-collared manakins). At ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½, my collaborative research with students primarily examines how age and experience of field sparrows influences their reproductive success at the college’s River and Field Campus.
Select Publications
Carr, J. M. & Golinski, J. E. (2020). Vigilance behaviors of ruby-throated hummingbirds (Archilochus colubris) reflect elevated risk of competitive interactions with vespine wasps. Wilson Journal of Ornithology 132, 295-305.
Carr, J. M., Gimpel, M. E., & Small, D. M. (2019). Patterns of provisioning in known-age field sparrows (Spizella pusilla): a multi-year study. Northeastern Naturalist 26, 484-498.
Carr, J. M. & Rydel, C. E. (2019). Medieval birds: science meets poetry in the Parliament of Fowls. The Once and Future Classroom: Resources for Teaching the Middle Ages 15 (1), 1-37.
Gimpel, M. E. & Carr, J. M. (2017). First known case of a passerine presumably returning a dead chick to the nest. Maryland Birdlife 66, 29-35.
Carr, J. M. & Lima, S. L. (2014). Wintering birds avoid warm sunshine: predation and the costs of foraging in sunlight. Oecologia 174, 713-721.
Carr, J. M. & Lima, S. L. (2013). Nocturnal hypothermia impairs flight ability in birds: a cost of being cool. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 280, 20131846.
Carr, J. M. & Lima, S. L. (2012). Heat-conserving postures hinder escape: a thermoregulation-predation trade-off in wintering birds. Behavioral Ecology 23, 434-441.
Carr, J. M. & Lima, S. L. (2010). High wind speeds decrease the responsiveness of birds to potentially threatening moving stimuli. Animal Behaviour 80, 215-220
Note: Previous publications under J. M. Carr