Copyright is owned by publisher: http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Resources can be aggregated both within and between patches. In this article, we examine how aggregation at these different scales influences the behavior and performance of foragers. We developed an optimal foraging model of the foraging behavior of the parasitoid wasp Cotesia rubecula parasitizing the larvae of the cabbage butterfly Pieris rapae. The optimal behavior was found using stochastic dynamic programming. The most interesting and novel result is that the effect of resource aggregation within and between patches depends on the degree of aggregation both within and between patches as well as on the local host density in the occupied patch, but lifetime reproductive succ...
Expansion and intensification of human land use represents the major cause of habitat fragmentation....
1. Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesi...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from www.jstor.org.No abstract is ava...
Resources can be aggregated both within and between patches. In this article, we examine how aggrega...
Resources can be aggregated both within and between patches. In this article, we examine how aggrega...
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Papers in the Biological Sciences at ...
In nature, resources are not uniformly distributed and most often occur aggregated in patches. The p...
Recent ecological studies have started integrate to spatial variation of ecological patterns into th...
Explaining large-scale ordered patterns and their effects on ecosystem functioning is a fundamental ...
European and American populations of the parasitoid Cotesia glomerata show pronounced differences in...
A key problem faced by foragers is how to forage when resources are distributed heterogeneously in s...
The ideal free distribution (IFD) is a stable distribution of competitors among resource patches. Fo...
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...
Expansion and intensification of human land use represents the major cause of habitat fragmentation....
Expansion and intensification of human land use represents the major cause of habitat fragmentation....
1. Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesi...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from www.jstor.org.No abstract is ava...
Resources can be aggregated both within and between patches. In this article, we examine how aggrega...
Resources can be aggregated both within and between patches. In this article, we examine how aggrega...
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Papers in the Biological Sciences at ...
In nature, resources are not uniformly distributed and most often occur aggregated in patches. The p...
Recent ecological studies have started integrate to spatial variation of ecological patterns into th...
Explaining large-scale ordered patterns and their effects on ecosystem functioning is a fundamental ...
European and American populations of the parasitoid Cotesia glomerata show pronounced differences in...
A key problem faced by foragers is how to forage when resources are distributed heterogeneously in s...
The ideal free distribution (IFD) is a stable distribution of competitors among resource patches. Fo...
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...
Expansion and intensification of human land use represents the major cause of habitat fragmentation....
Expansion and intensification of human land use represents the major cause of habitat fragmentation....
1. Parasitoids are predicted to spend longer in patches with more hosts, but previous work on Cotesi...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from www.jstor.org.No abstract is ava...