Britt Heidinger

Britt Heidinger

North Dakota State University

H-index: 24

North America-United States

About Britt Heidinger

Britt Heidinger, With an exceptional h-index of 24 and a recent h-index of 21 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at North Dakota State University, specializes in the field of Physiological Ecology, Behavioral Ecology, Life-history Evolution, Senescence, Stress Response.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Climate change and its effects on body size and shape: the role of endocrine mechanisms

The impact of parental and developmental stress on DNA methylation in the avian hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis

Early‐life telomeres are influenced by environments acting at multiple temporal and spatial scales

Compensatory Growth Is Accompanied by Changes in Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 but Not Markers of Cellular Aging in a Long-Lived Seabird

Chill out: Environmentally relevant cooling challenge does not increase telomere loss during early life

Parental age does not influence offspring telomeres during early life in common gulls (Larus canus)

Experimentally elevated testosterone shortens telomeres across years in a free‐living songbird

Postnatal expression of IGF2 is the norm in amniote vertebrates

Britt Heidinger Information

University

Position

Associate Professor

Citations(all)

2909

Citations(since 2020)

1356

Cited By

2145

hIndex(all)

24

hIndex(since 2020)

21

i10Index(all)

35

i10Index(since 2020)

30

Email

University Profile Page

North Dakota State University

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Britt Heidinger Skills & Research Interests

Physiological Ecology

Behavioral Ecology

Life-history Evolution

Senescence

Stress Response

Top articles of Britt Heidinger

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Climate change and its effects on body size and shape: the role of endocrine mechanisms

Gabrielle R Names

Jennifer L Grindstaff

David F Westneat

Britt J Heidinger

2024/3/25

The impact of parental and developmental stress on DNA methylation in the avian hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis

Molecular Ecology

Stefanie J Siller Wilks

Britt J Heidinger

David F Westneat

Joseph Solomon

Dustin R Rubenstein

2024/3

Early‐life telomeres are influenced by environments acting at multiple temporal and spatial scales

Molecular Ecology

David F Westneat

Rebecca C Young

Alexandra G Cones

Aurelia C Kucera

Angelo Anacleto

...

2023/11

Compensatory Growth Is Accompanied by Changes in Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 but Not Markers of Cellular Aging in a Long-Lived Seabird

The American Naturalist

Aubrey E Sirman

Jacob E Schmidt

Mark E Clark

Jeffrey D Kittilson

Wendy L Reed

...

2023/7/1

Chill out: Environmentally relevant cooling challenge does not increase telomere loss during early life

General and Comparative Endocrinology

Sharon E Lynn

Michael D Kern

Bridget Serrurier

Aubrey Sirman

Britt J Heidinger

2022/12/1

Parental age does not influence offspring telomeres during early life in common gulls (Larus canus)

Molecular ecology

Tuul Sepp

Richard Meitern

Britt Heidinger

Kristina Noreikiene

Kalev Rattiste

...

2022/12

Experimentally elevated testosterone shortens telomeres across years in a free‐living songbird

Molecular ecology

Britt J Heidinger

Samuel P Slowinski

Aubrey E Sirman

Jeffrey Kittilson

Nicole M Gerlach

...

2022/12

Postnatal expression of IGF2 is the norm in amniote vertebrates

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Abby Beatty

Alexander M Rubin

Haruka Wada

Britt Heidinger

Wendy R Hood

...

2022/2/23

The probability of being infected with haemosporidian parasites increases with host age but is not affected by experimental testosterone elevation in a wild songbird

Journal of Avian Biology

Samuel P Slowinski

Aidan J Geissler

Nicole Gerlach

Britt J Heidinger

Ellen D Ketterson

2022/1

Longer telomeres during early life predict higher lifetime reproductive success in females but not males

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Britt J Heidinger

Aurelia C Kucera

Jeff D Kittilson

David F Westneat

2021/5/26

No evidence of physiological declines with age in an extremely long-lived fish

Scientific Reports

Derek J Sauer

Britt J Heidinger

Jeffrey D Kittilson

Alec R Lackmann

Mark E Clark

2021/4/27

TA‐65 does not increase telomere length during post‐natal development in house sparrow chicks (Passer domesticus)

Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological and Integrative Physiology

Jennifer T Vangorder‐Braid

Aubrey E Sirman

Aurelia C Kucera

Jeffrey D Kittilson

Tania M Kibble

...

2021/3

Effects of human disturbance on postnatal growth and baseline corticosterone in a long-lived bird

Conservation Physiology

Hannah Watson

Pat Monaghan

Britt J Heidinger

Mark Bolton

2021

Repeated exposure to challenging environmental conditions influences telomere dynamics across adult life as predicted by changes in mortality risk

FASEB Journal

Valeria Marasco

Winnie Boner

Kate Griffiths

Britt Heidinger

Pat Monaghan

2021

Cross‐Generational Effects of Parental Age on Offspring Longevity: Are Telomeres an Important Underlying Mechanism?

Britt J Heidinger

Rebecca C Young

2020/9

See List of Professors in Britt Heidinger University(North Dakota State University)

Co-Authors

H-index: 95
Neil B. Metcalfe

Neil B. Metcalfe

University of Glasgow

H-index: 81
Pat Monaghan

Pat Monaghan

University of Glasgow

H-index: 71
Ellen D. Ketterson

Ellen D. Ketterson

Indiana University Bloomington

H-index: 48
Neil P Evans

Neil P Evans

University of Glasgow

H-index: 46
Jonathan D. Blount

Jonathan D. Blount

University of Exeter

H-index: 39
Mark Haussmann

Mark Haussmann

Bucknell University

academic-engine