The relative abilities of individual cichlids, Tilapia zillii to obtain food under scramble competition was highly repeatable between trials using a single input source, regardless of whether the input was constant or variable. However, when given a choice between two patches differing only in their temporal variability in input about an identical mean, an individual's rank based on intake in one patch was uncorrelated with either its intake in the other patch or its intake in the single-patch trials. In the two-patch trials, certain individuals both spent more time in food patches and visited patches more often than others, and overall the fish spent more time in the constant rate patch than the variable patch, leading to more items being ...
Abstract Colonizing organisms actively choosing habitats face a bewildering array of choices regardi...
Interference competition for food is difficult to measure because feeding rates altered by behaviora...
Familiarity is thought to stabilize dominance hierarchies and reduce aggressive interactions within ...
Key predictions of unequal competitor ideal free distribution models were tested using a continuous ...
Cichlid fish (Aequidens curviceps) distributed themselves and allocated their foraging time between ...
Recent influential models of the distribution of foraging animals have recognised the importance of ...
Empirical and theoretical investigations of aspects of the ideal free distribution (IFD) are present...
In many social species individuals have to make adaptive decisions about with whom to group. Self-re...
While the effect of patch area on economic defendability has attracted considerable attention, there...
Population foraging in a patchy environment can lead to an ideal free distribution of competitors am...
In studying the success of foraging animals, studies of interference competition have put emphasis o...
Previous studies of interference competition have shown an asymmetric effect on intake rate of forag...
Goldfish in shoals of 2 spent less time foraging than fish in shoals of 5, probably because of incre...
Dominance hierarchies and the resulting unequal resource partitioning among individuals are key mech...
Previous studies have shown that domestic chicks, Gallus gallus domesticus, trained in a competitive...
Abstract Colonizing organisms actively choosing habitats face a bewildering array of choices regardi...
Interference competition for food is difficult to measure because feeding rates altered by behaviora...
Familiarity is thought to stabilize dominance hierarchies and reduce aggressive interactions within ...
Key predictions of unequal competitor ideal free distribution models were tested using a continuous ...
Cichlid fish (Aequidens curviceps) distributed themselves and allocated their foraging time between ...
Recent influential models of the distribution of foraging animals have recognised the importance of ...
Empirical and theoretical investigations of aspects of the ideal free distribution (IFD) are present...
In many social species individuals have to make adaptive decisions about with whom to group. Self-re...
While the effect of patch area on economic defendability has attracted considerable attention, there...
Population foraging in a patchy environment can lead to an ideal free distribution of competitors am...
In studying the success of foraging animals, studies of interference competition have put emphasis o...
Previous studies of interference competition have shown an asymmetric effect on intake rate of forag...
Goldfish in shoals of 2 spent less time foraging than fish in shoals of 5, probably because of incre...
Dominance hierarchies and the resulting unequal resource partitioning among individuals are key mech...
Previous studies have shown that domestic chicks, Gallus gallus domesticus, trained in a competitive...
Abstract Colonizing organisms actively choosing habitats face a bewildering array of choices regardi...
Interference competition for food is difficult to measure because feeding rates altered by behaviora...
Familiarity is thought to stabilize dominance hierarchies and reduce aggressive interactions within ...