For foraging herbivores, both food quality and predation risk vary across the landscape. Animals should avoid low-quality food patches in favour of high-quality ones, and seek safe patches while avoiding risky ones. Herbivores often face the foraging dilemma, however, of choosing between high-quality food in risky places or low-quality food in safe places. Here, we explore how and why the interaction between food quality and predation risk affects foraging decisions of mammalian herbivores, focusing on browsers confronting plant toxins in a landscape of fear. We draw together themes of plant–herbivore and predator–prey interactions, and the roles of animal ecophysiology, behaviour and personality. The response of herbivores to the dual cost...
In a heterogeneous environment, where food occurs as patches, herbivores have the opportunity to sel...
Plants possess a wide variety of compounds and growth forms that are termed anti-quality factors b...
Many invertebrate herbivores sequester plant toxins from their food, and the availability of toxins ...
For foraging herbivores, both food quality and predation risk vary across the landscape. Animals sho...
We discuss fear and vigilance from the perspective of foraging theory. Rather than focusing on proxi...
Understanding habitat use by animals requires understanding the simultaneous tradeoffs between food ...
Predators and plant toxins which act as chemical defences, represent two different but proximate con...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
The availability and quality of forage on the landscape constitute the foodscape within which animal...
Our objective is to develop explanations for why herbivores ingest poisonous plants by first discuss...
Both plants and animals reduce their risk of being eaten by detecting and responding to herbivore an...
Perceived predation risk varies in space and time creating a landscape of fear. This key feature of ...
Anthropogenic environmental change is escalating in magnitude, rate, and extent, inducing cascading ...
Plants possess a wide variety of compounds and growth forms that are termed "anti-quality" factors b...
Young herbivores learn which foods are harmful and which are safe through interactions with their mo...
In a heterogeneous environment, where food occurs as patches, herbivores have the opportunity to sel...
Plants possess a wide variety of compounds and growth forms that are termed anti-quality factors b...
Many invertebrate herbivores sequester plant toxins from their food, and the availability of toxins ...
For foraging herbivores, both food quality and predation risk vary across the landscape. Animals sho...
We discuss fear and vigilance from the perspective of foraging theory. Rather than focusing on proxi...
Understanding habitat use by animals requires understanding the simultaneous tradeoffs between food ...
Predators and plant toxins which act as chemical defences, represent two different but proximate con...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
The availability and quality of forage on the landscape constitute the foodscape within which animal...
Our objective is to develop explanations for why herbivores ingest poisonous plants by first discuss...
Both plants and animals reduce their risk of being eaten by detecting and responding to herbivore an...
Perceived predation risk varies in space and time creating a landscape of fear. This key feature of ...
Anthropogenic environmental change is escalating in magnitude, rate, and extent, inducing cascading ...
Plants possess a wide variety of compounds and growth forms that are termed "anti-quality" factors b...
Young herbivores learn which foods are harmful and which are safe through interactions with their mo...
In a heterogeneous environment, where food occurs as patches, herbivores have the opportunity to sel...
Plants possess a wide variety of compounds and growth forms that are termed anti-quality factors b...
Many invertebrate herbivores sequester plant toxins from their food, and the availability of toxins ...