The hypothesis that superfluous killing, partial consumption, and abandonment of prey is a consequence of adaptation to food-limited environments was tested in two feeding trials on a desert spider, Agelenopsis aperta. First, we made comparisons among populations inhabiting sites of high prey (HP) or low prey (LP) availability that differed in their degree of genetic isolation. Typically, A. aperta entirely consumed one or two of the prey items it captured in a feeding bout. Additional prey were partially consumed or abandoned without eating. Spiders from the genetically isolated HP population, however, captured fewer prey and showed a higher incidence of full feeding on prey than did individuals from the other populations. Only one spider ...
One of the benefits of cooperative hunting may be that predators can subdue larger prey. In spiders,...
Generalist populations are often composed of individuals each specialized on only a subset of the re...
Predators living in social groups often show consistent inter-individual differences in prey capture...
I examined the potential genetic and environmental determinants of population differences in the for...
Widely distributed species are exposed to different environmental forces throughout their range. As ...
1. Cannibalism was investigated in the wolf spider Pardosa monticola (Clerck) using spiders collecte...
Ineffective hunters in cooperative foraging groups may be shielded from natural selection by their m...
The evolution of group living is regarded as a major evolutionary transition and is commonly met wit...
Intraspecific variation has recently been acknowledged as an important factor affecting ecosystems. ...
Spider venoms are complex mixtures of chemicals whose primary function is to immobilize prey. The ch...
Understanding the social organization of group living organisms is crucial for the comprehension of ...
This thesis discusses several different models of interacting populations, each of which provide ins...
In animal groups whose focus is on juvenile growth, prey attributes and the way in which individuals...
Dietary differentiation is an integral component of species coexistence, and among solitary predator...
It is well known that a predator has the potential to regulate a prey population only if the predato...
One of the benefits of cooperative hunting may be that predators can subdue larger prey. In spiders,...
Generalist populations are often composed of individuals each specialized on only a subset of the re...
Predators living in social groups often show consistent inter-individual differences in prey capture...
I examined the potential genetic and environmental determinants of population differences in the for...
Widely distributed species are exposed to different environmental forces throughout their range. As ...
1. Cannibalism was investigated in the wolf spider Pardosa monticola (Clerck) using spiders collecte...
Ineffective hunters in cooperative foraging groups may be shielded from natural selection by their m...
The evolution of group living is regarded as a major evolutionary transition and is commonly met wit...
Intraspecific variation has recently been acknowledged as an important factor affecting ecosystems. ...
Spider venoms are complex mixtures of chemicals whose primary function is to immobilize prey. The ch...
Understanding the social organization of group living organisms is crucial for the comprehension of ...
This thesis discusses several different models of interacting populations, each of which provide ins...
In animal groups whose focus is on juvenile growth, prey attributes and the way in which individuals...
Dietary differentiation is an integral component of species coexistence, and among solitary predator...
It is well known that a predator has the potential to regulate a prey population only if the predato...
One of the benefits of cooperative hunting may be that predators can subdue larger prey. In spiders,...
Generalist populations are often composed of individuals each specialized on only a subset of the re...
Predators living in social groups often show consistent inter-individual differences in prey capture...