Individual foraging specialization describes the phenomenon where conspecifics within a population of generalists exhibit differences in foraging behavior, each specializing on different prey types. Individual specialization is widespread in animals, yet is understudied in invertebrates, despite potential impacts to food web and population dynamics. Sceliphron caementarium (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae) is an excellent system to examine individual specialization. Females of these mud-dauber wasps capture and paralyze spiders which they store in mud nests to provision their offspring. Individuals may make hundreds of prey choices in their short lifespan and fully intact prey items can be easily excavated from their mud nests, where each distinct n...
Two recent hypotheses have linked resource usage to the evolution of sociality in Hymenoptera. One h...
Competition for resources is a major organizing principle in communities of organisms that share sim...
Describing the factors that shape collective behaviour is central to our understanding of animal soc...
Individual foraging specialization describes the phenomenon where conspecifics within a population o...
Understanding the social organization of group living organisms is crucial for the comprehension of ...
Individual-level variation in resource use occurs in a broad array of vertebrate and invertebrate ta...
Predators living in social groups often show consistent inter-individual differences in prey capture...
In groups of socially foraging animals, feeding behaviour may change with group size in response to ...
Generalist populations are often composed of individuals each specialized on only a subset of the re...
Intuitively, larger predators in a population may be favoured in subduing, handling and carrying to ...
655-662. Individuals of a population may differ with respect to resource use. This among-individual ...
Ineffective hunters in cooperative foraging groups may be shielded from natural selection by their m...
Sister taxa that coexist in the same space and time often face competition due to the use of similar...
Predatory habits of apoid wasps are well documented for many species, revealing a choice of prey ran...
The evolution of group living is regarded as a major evolutionary transition and is commonly met wit...
Two recent hypotheses have linked resource usage to the evolution of sociality in Hymenoptera. One h...
Competition for resources is a major organizing principle in communities of organisms that share sim...
Describing the factors that shape collective behaviour is central to our understanding of animal soc...
Individual foraging specialization describes the phenomenon where conspecifics within a population o...
Understanding the social organization of group living organisms is crucial for the comprehension of ...
Individual-level variation in resource use occurs in a broad array of vertebrate and invertebrate ta...
Predators living in social groups often show consistent inter-individual differences in prey capture...
In groups of socially foraging animals, feeding behaviour may change with group size in response to ...
Generalist populations are often composed of individuals each specialized on only a subset of the re...
Intuitively, larger predators in a population may be favoured in subduing, handling and carrying to ...
655-662. Individuals of a population may differ with respect to resource use. This among-individual ...
Ineffective hunters in cooperative foraging groups may be shielded from natural selection by their m...
Sister taxa that coexist in the same space and time often face competition due to the use of similar...
Predatory habits of apoid wasps are well documented for many species, revealing a choice of prey ran...
The evolution of group living is regarded as a major evolutionary transition and is commonly met wit...
Two recent hypotheses have linked resource usage to the evolution of sociality in Hymenoptera. One h...
Competition for resources is a major organizing principle in communities of organisms that share sim...
Describing the factors that shape collective behaviour is central to our understanding of animal soc...