Prey risk allocation in a grazing ecosystem.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Justin A. Gude | J. Borkowski | R. Garrott | Robert A Garrott | F. King | Justin A Gude | John J Borkowski | Fred King
[1] S. Peacor,et al. A REVIEW OF TRAIT-MEDIATED INDIRECT INTERACTIONS IN ECOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES , 2003 .
[2] S. L. Lima,et al. Predator-prey shell games: large-scale movement and its implications for decision-making by prey , 2002 .
[3] Douglas W. Smith,et al. Yellowstone after Wolves , 2003 .
[4] Keith W. Pecor,et al. Frequency of Encounter with Risk and the Tradeoff between Pursuit and Antipredator Behaviors in Crayfish: A Test of the Risk Allocation Hypothesis , 2003 .
[5] R. Powell,et al. An Evaluation of the Accuracy of Kernel Density Estimators for Home Range Analysis , 1996 .
[6] S. Peacor,et al. The contribution of trait-mediated indirect effects to the net effects of a predator , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[7] Cole,et al. Trophic cascades revealed in diverse ecosystems. , 1999, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[8] D. Wardle,et al. Herbivore-mediated linkages between aboveground and belowground communities , 2003 .
[9] S. L. Lima. Nonlethal Effects in the Ecology of Predator-Prey Interactions What are the ecological effects of anti-predator decision-making? , 1998 .
[10] Douglas W. Smith,et al. WINTER PREY SELECTION AND ESTIMATION OF WOLF KILL RATES IN YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, 1995–2000 , 2004 .
[11] Monica G. Turner,et al. Simulating Winter Interactions Among Ungulates, Vegetation, and Fire in Northern Yellowstone Park , 1994 .
[12] E. Koivisto,et al. Effects of temporal variation in the risk of predation by least weasel (Mustela nivalis) on feeding behavior of field vole (Microtus agrestis) , 2003, Evolutionary Ecology.
[13] David J. Augustine,et al. EFFECTS OF MIGRATORY GRAZERS ON SPATIAL HETEROGENEITY OF SOIL NITROGEN PROPERTIES IN A GRASSLAND ECOSYSTEM , 2001 .
[14] H. Olff,et al. Effects of herbivores on grassland plant diversity. , 1998, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[15] M. Boyce,et al. WOLVES INFLUENCE ELK MOVEMENTS: BEHAVIOR SHAPES A TROPHIC CASCADE IN YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK , 2005 .
[16] S. McNaughton,et al. Ecology of a Grazing Ecosystem: The Serengeti , 1985 .
[17] Oswald J. Schmitz,et al. Behaviorally mediated trophic cascades : Effects of predation risk on food web interactions , 1997 .
[18] Robert L. Beschta,et al. COTTONWOODS, ELK, AND WOLVES IN THE LAMAR VALLEY OF YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK , 2003 .
[19] W. Ripple,et al. Trophic cascades among wolves, elk and aspen on Yellowstone National Park’s northern range , 2001 .
[20] S. L. Lima,et al. Temporal Variation in Danger Drives Antipredator Behavior: The Predation Risk Allocation Hypothesis , 1999, The American Naturalist.
[21] David J. Augustine,et al. Ungulate effects on the functional species composition of plant communities; herbivore selectivity and plant tolerance , 1998 .
[22] E. O. Garton,et al. Elk habitat selection on the clearwater national forest, Idaho , 1998 .
[23] A. Collins,et al. Evolution of river dolphins , 2001, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[24] E. Koivisto,et al. Variation in predation risk and vole feeding behaviour: a field test of the risk allocation hypothesis , 2004, Oecologia.
[25] A. Portmann,et al. A test of the risk allocation hypothesis: tadpole responses to temporal change in predation risk , 2002 .
[26] A. Sih. Prey Uncertainty and the Balancing of Antipredator and Feeding Needs , 1992, The American Naturalist.
[27] S. McNaughton,et al. Grazing Lawns: Animals in Herds, Plant Form, and Coevolution , 1984, The American Naturalist.
[28] R. Moen,et al. Winter nutritional restriction and simulated body condition of yellowstone elk and bison before and after the fires of 1988 , 2001 .
[29] A. Sih,et al. Prey responses to pulses of risk and safety: testing the risk allocation hypothesis , 2002, Animal Behaviour.
[30] N. Hobbs. Modification of Ecosystems by Ungulates , 1996 .
[31] D. C. Bowden,et al. Ungulate Grazing in Sagebrush Grassland: Mechanisms of Resource Competition , 1996 .
[32] H. Prins,et al. Dangerous Lions and Nonchalant Buffalo , 1989 .
[33] Jörn Theuerkauf,et al. Daily movements and territory use by radio-collared wolves (Canis lupus) in Bialowieza Primeval Forest in Poland , 2001 .
[34] Douglas A. Frank,et al. The ecology of the earth's grazing ecosystems: Profound functional similarities exist between the Serengeti and Yellowstone , 1998 .
[35] D. Frank. UNGULATE REGULATION OF ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES IN YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK : DIRECT AND FEEDBACK EFFECTS , 1998 .
[36] O. Schmitz,et al. Trophic Cascades in Terrestrial Systems: A Review of the Effects of Carnivore Removals on Plants , 2000, The American Naturalist.
[37] Douglas A. Frank,et al. CONSUMER CONTROL OF GRASSLAND PLANT PRODUCTION , 2002 .
[38] R. Naiman,et al. Selective Foraging and Ecosystem Processes in Boreal Forests , 1992, The American Naturalist.
[39] S. Creel,et al. Responses of elk herd size to fine-scale spatial and temporal variation in the risk of predation by wolves , 2005, Animal Behaviour.
[40] D. Barnett,et al. ELK, MULTIPLE FACTORS, AND PERSISTENCE OF WILLOWS IN NATIONAL PARKS , 1998 .
[41] Oswald J. Schmitz,et al. Trophic cascades : the primacy of trait-mediated indirect interactions , 2004 .