The Impact of Different Growth Pattern on the Utilization of Tree Species by a Generalist Herbivore, the Moose Alces Alces: Implications of Optimal Foraging Theory
- 1 January 1990
- book chapter
- Published by Springer Nature
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Winter Browsing by Moose on Two Birch Species: Impact on Food ResourcesOikos, 1989
- Effects of Simulated Winter Browsing by Moose on Morphology and Biomass of Two Birch SpeciesJournal of Ecology, 1987
- Optimal foraging and community structure: implications for a guild of generalist grassland herbivoresOecologia, 1986
- Interactions between Browsing Moose and Two Species of Birch in SwedenEcology, 1985
- Resource Availability and Plant Antiherbivore DefenseScience, 1985
- A general version of optimal foraging theory: The effect of simultaneous encountersTheoretical Population Biology, 1984
- Carbon/Nutrient Balance of Boreal Plants in Relation to Vertebrate HerbivoryOikos, 1983
- Phytochemical Deterrence of Snowshoe Hare Browsing by Adventitious Shoots of Four Alaskan TreesScience, 1981
- The Mineral Nutrition of Wild PlantsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1980
- Seasonal Movement of Nutrients in Plants of Differing Growth Form in an Alaskan Tundra Ecosystem: Implications for HerbivoryJournal of Ecology, 1980