Journal of Field Ornithology

Papers
(The median citation count of Journal of Field Ornithology is 1. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-08-01 to 2025-08-01.)
ArticleCitations
Structure and organization of songs of south‐temperate Grass Wrens ( Cistothorus platensis )14
Factors affecting burrow occupancy and bank persistence for Bank Swallows breeding in aggregate (sand and gravel) pits and natural habitats8
A review of the conservation status of birds in the Guineo‐Congolian forest of Africa8
Recent literatureFlorida Scrub‐Jay: Field Notes on a Vanishing BirdMarkJerome Walters. 2021. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, FL. 176 pages. ISBN 0813066727 (Hardcover). $21.11 (Hardcover).7
Lewis’s Woodpecker nest success and habitat selection in floodplain and burned forests in western Montana5
Current distribution and abundance of Kohala forest birds in Hawai‘i4
Hydrology affects shorebirds, waterfowl, and other waterbirds at Bear River Bay, a Globally Important Bird Area3
Supplemental feeding of insect larvae increases mass of nestling Eastern Bluebirds, but not nestling Black‐capped Chickadees3
Trade‐offs in performance of six lightweight automated tracking devices for birds3
Post‐fledging ecology of endangered Golden‐cheeked Warblers2
Nest‐site selection by Cassia Crossbills and management implications2
Territorial responses of male Bermuda White‐eyed Vireos (Vireo griseussubsp.bermudianus) reflect phylogenetic similarity of intruders and acoustic similarity of their songs2
Changes in arthropod communities between breeding stages in nests of Great Tits1
Issue Information1
Importance of tropical mixed‐species flocks for migratory birds in shade‐grown coffee: implications of foraging together1
A low‐cost, easy‐to‐build, and portable bite‐force transducer for birds1
Flight directions of songbirds are unaffected by the topography of Lake Erie’s southern coastline during fall migration1
Using automated telemetry to identify population connectivity and migration phenology of Snowy Plovers breeding in the Southern Great Plains1
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