We examined patch residence times for an omnivorous predator, Dicyphus hesperus on a variety of plants and prey. Individual D. hesperus were placed in cages containing either mullein, tomato, pepper or chrysanthemum plants, and either no prey, Mediterranean flour moth eggs, greenhouse whitefly pupae or two-spotted spider mite adults. Patch residence times were typically greater than 24 h. The probability of remaining on the patch was greatest on mullein and tomato, followed by chrysanthemum and least on pepper, whereas probability of remaining on the patch was greatest when flour moth eggs were present, and least when no prey were available. Patch residence time in D. hesperus was determined by both the prey, and the species of plant, in an...
The patch and host utilization behaviors of the parasitoids Diaeretiella rapae (Kurdjumov) and Aphel...
1. Patch marks that allow the subsequent avoidance of marked areas may be used by small animals to i...
The resource concentration hypothesis (Root 1973) predicts that specialist herbivorous insects shoul...
Abstract 1. Competing foragers are affected by the distribution of resources, but can also affect re...
The foraging behaviour of omnivores is often difficult to predict and, thus, our understanding of th...
1. For animal species that forage on patchily distributed resources, patch time allocation is of pri...
Animals foraging for patchily distributed resources may optimize their foraging decisions concerning...
Abstract Patch residence time is at the core of models of decision making by foragers living in patc...
While measuring the predators' functional response for the assessment of their aptitude as biologica...
Abstract This study examined the diel activity pattern and the effect of diel activity pattern on pr...
The effects of water stress (produced by water deprivation and prey feeding) on plant feeding were i...
In patchy environments, patch-leaving decision rules are a key component of the foraging behavior of...
The effects of patch quality on the foraging behaviour of an anthocorid predator Orius sauteri (Popp...
Orius sauteri (Poppius) (Heteroptera: Anthocoridae) is a polyphagous predator used as a biological c...
Experimental data on the relationship between plant patch size and population density of herbivores ...
The patch and host utilization behaviors of the parasitoids Diaeretiella rapae (Kurdjumov) and Aphel...
1. Patch marks that allow the subsequent avoidance of marked areas may be used by small animals to i...
The resource concentration hypothesis (Root 1973) predicts that specialist herbivorous insects shoul...
Abstract 1. Competing foragers are affected by the distribution of resources, but can also affect re...
The foraging behaviour of omnivores is often difficult to predict and, thus, our understanding of th...
1. For animal species that forage on patchily distributed resources, patch time allocation is of pri...
Animals foraging for patchily distributed resources may optimize their foraging decisions concerning...
Abstract Patch residence time is at the core of models of decision making by foragers living in patc...
While measuring the predators' functional response for the assessment of their aptitude as biologica...
Abstract This study examined the diel activity pattern and the effect of diel activity pattern on pr...
The effects of water stress (produced by water deprivation and prey feeding) on plant feeding were i...
In patchy environments, patch-leaving decision rules are a key component of the foraging behavior of...
The effects of patch quality on the foraging behaviour of an anthocorid predator Orius sauteri (Popp...
Orius sauteri (Poppius) (Heteroptera: Anthocoridae) is a polyphagous predator used as a biological c...
Experimental data on the relationship between plant patch size and population density of herbivores ...
The patch and host utilization behaviors of the parasitoids Diaeretiella rapae (Kurdjumov) and Aphel...
1. Patch marks that allow the subsequent avoidance of marked areas may be used by small animals to i...
The resource concentration hypothesis (Root 1973) predicts that specialist herbivorous insects shoul...