Abstract Patch residence time is at the core of models of decision making by foragers living in patchy environments. We studied patch residence time (PRT) of Ibalia leucospoides, a parasitoid of the woodwasp Sirex noctilio, as assigned to 4 treatments (recent feeding and/or oviposition experience) foraging in an array of host-infested pine logs. We tested the effects of distance from release point, host abundance, and the number of con-specifics at the time of arrival, on patch (pine log) residence time. PRT depended on a combination of patch quality (number of hosts in a log) and distance from the release point. Neither the presence of con-specifics on the patch, prior exposure to hosts, nor feeding prior to the experiment affected the tim...
Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesia r...
Abstract Habitat structure has broad impacts on many biological systems. In particular, habitat frag...
International audience1. In this paper, the foraging behaviour (the proximal mechanisms involved in ...
1. In environments in which resources are distributed heterogeneously, patch choice and the length o...
Animals foraging for patchily distributed resources may optimize their foraging decisions concerning...
Classical optimal-foraging theory predicts that a parasitoid is less likely to leave a patch after a...
Classical optimal-foraging theory predicts that a parasitoid is less likely to leave a patch after a...
1. For animal species that forage on patchily distributed resources, patch time allocation is of pri...
In patchy environments, patch-leaving decision rules are a key component of the foraging behavior of...
This study investigated the effects of host density and distribution on the patch-leaving behavior o...
The original publication can be found at www.springerlink.comThis study investigated the effects of ...
1. We analysed the foraging behaviour of two closely related parasitoid species (Cotesia rubecula an...
European and American populations of the parasitoid Cotesia glomerata show pronounced differences in...
Notice dans HAL : hal-00136285International audienceThe present study aimed to address how an insect...
1. Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesi...
Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesia r...
Abstract Habitat structure has broad impacts on many biological systems. In particular, habitat frag...
International audience1. In this paper, the foraging behaviour (the proximal mechanisms involved in ...
1. In environments in which resources are distributed heterogeneously, patch choice and the length o...
Animals foraging for patchily distributed resources may optimize their foraging decisions concerning...
Classical optimal-foraging theory predicts that a parasitoid is less likely to leave a patch after a...
Classical optimal-foraging theory predicts that a parasitoid is less likely to leave a patch after a...
1. For animal species that forage on patchily distributed resources, patch time allocation is of pri...
In patchy environments, patch-leaving decision rules are a key component of the foraging behavior of...
This study investigated the effects of host density and distribution on the patch-leaving behavior o...
The original publication can be found at www.springerlink.comThis study investigated the effects of ...
1. We analysed the foraging behaviour of two closely related parasitoid species (Cotesia rubecula an...
European and American populations of the parasitoid Cotesia glomerata show pronounced differences in...
Notice dans HAL : hal-00136285International audienceThe present study aimed to address how an insect...
1. Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesi...
Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesia r...
Abstract Habitat structure has broad impacts on many biological systems. In particular, habitat frag...
International audience1. In this paper, the foraging behaviour (the proximal mechanisms involved in ...