FROM INDIVIDUALS TO POPULATIONS: PREY FISH RISK-TAKING MEDIATES MORTALITY IN WHOLE-SYSTEM EXPERIMENTS
- 1 September 2003
- Vol. 84 (9) , 2419-2431
- https://doi.org/10.1890/02-0416
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- POPULATION CONSEQUENCES OF A PREDATOR-INDUCED HABITAT SHIFT BY TROUT IN WHOLE-LAKE EXPERIMENTSEcology, 2003
- EFFECT OF FOOD AND PREDATORS ON THE ACTIVITY OF FOUR LARVAL RANID FROGSEcology, 2000
- Predictable changes in predation mortality as a consequence of changes in food availability and predation riskEvolutionary Ecology, 1998
- How should we test for the role of behaviourin population dynamics?Evolutionary Ecology, 1997
- Interaction Between Food Availability and Predation Mortality Mediated by Adaptive BehaviorEcology, 1995
- Optimal traits when there are several costs: the interaction of mortality and energy costs in determining foraging behaviorBehavioral Ecology, 1993
- Why Predation Rate Should Not be Proportional to Predator DensityEcology, 1993
- Life History and the Relationship Between Food Availability and Foraging EffortEcology, 1991
- The Effects of Adaptive Behavior on the Type‐2 Functional ResponseEcology, 1990
- Foraging Time Optimization and Interactions in Food WebsThe American Naturalist, 1984