1,081 results — topic: Wildlife Behavior

Dataset

Data from: Optimal multisensory integration

Animals are often confronted with potentially informative stimuli from a variety of sensory modalities. While there is a large proximate literature demonstrating multisensory integration, no general framework explains why animals integrate. We developed and tested a quantitative model that explains

Munoz, Nicole, Blumstein, Daniel2019DOI: 10.5061/dryad.747n4dvCited 1 times
Dataset

Data from: Early snowmelt projected to cause population decline in a subalpine plant

How climate change influences the dynamics of plant populations is not well understood, as few plant studies have measured responses of vital rates to climatic variables and modeled the impact on population growth. I used 25 years of demographic data to analyze how survival, growth, and fecundity re

Campbell, Diane R.2019DOI: 10.5061/dryad.3mp7f6fCited 1 times
Article

Food limitation of planktonic rotifers: field experiments in two mountain ponds

1. Resource competition is thought to be important in controlling zooplankton population dynamics and structuring zooplankton communities. Resource competition requires that resources are limiting. Ten field experiments were conducted to determine the presence and intensity of resource limitation of

Cordova S. E., Giffin J., Kirk K. L.2001Freshwater BiologyDOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2427.2001.00768.xCited 18 times
Article

Oviposition and Diapause Behavior in Colorado Potato Beetle (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) Populations from East Central Minnesota and the Valley of the Red River of the North

Abstract Oviposition and diapause behavior were compared among populations of Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say), from six locations in 1994 and 1995. Locations ranged from Winnipeg, Manitoba (49° 49′ N), to Rosemount in east central Minnesota (44° 44′ N). Newly emerged first su

Senanayake Dhammika G., Radcliffe Edward B., Holliday Neil J.2000Environmental EntomologyDOI: 10.1603/0046-225x-29.6.1123Cited 19 times
Thesis

Effects of nectar-robbing bumblebees on hummingbird-pollinator behavior and plant reproductive success in <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i> (Polemoniaceae)

Irwin R. E.2000
Student Paper

The use of rodent burrows by burying beetles, <i>Nicrophorus investigator</i>: A case of behavioral plasticity

Calahan C.2000
Article

Are nectar robbers cheaters or mutualists?

Nectar robbers are birds, insects, or other flower visitors that remove nectar from flowers through a hole pierced or bitten in the corolla. This paper is a review of the effects of nectar robbers on pollinators, pollination, and fitness of the plants they rob. Charles Darwin assumed that nectar rob

Maloof J. E., Inouye D. W.2000EcologyDOI: 10.1890/0012-9658(2000)081[2651:anrcom]2.0.co;2Cited 333 times
Article

Hummingbird avoidance of nectar-robbed plants: spatial location or visual cues

Broad‐tailed and rufous hummingbirds avoid plants and flowers that have recently been visited by nectar‐robbing bees. However, the cues the hummingbirds use to make such choices are not known. To determine the proximate cues hummingbirds use to avoid visiting nectar‐robbed plants, I conducted multip

Irwin R. E.2000OikosDOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0706.2000.910311.xCited 76 times
Article

Climate change is affecting altitudinal migrants and hibernating species

Calendar date of the beginning of the growing season at high altitude in the Colorado Rocky Mountains is variable but has not changed significantly over the past 25 years. This result differs from growing evidence from low altitudes that climate change is resulting in a longer growing season, earlie

Inouye D. W., Barr B., Armitage K. B.2000Proceedings of the National Academy of ScienceDOI: 10.1073/pnas.97.4.1630Cited 669 times
Article

Variation in behavior of lycaenid larvae when attended by different ant species

Axen A. H.2000Evolutionary Ecology
Article

Social enhancement of fitness in yellow-bellied marmots

The yellow-bellied marmot ( Marmota flaviventris ) is a social, ground-dwelling squirrel that lives either individually or in kin groups of from two to five adult females. Philopatry and daughter recruitment lead to the formation and persistence of matrilines at habitat sites. By using 37 years of d

Armitage K. B., Schwartz O. A.2000Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesDOI: 10.1073/pnas.200196097Cited 100 times
Article

The evolution, ecology, and systematics of marmots

Armitage K. B.2000Oecologia Montana
Student Paper

Factors affecting scent marking behavior in the North American Beaver (<i>Castor canadensis</i>)

Pierce J.1999
Student Paper

Colonial Costs and their Effects on the Behavior of Nestling Feeding and Nest Occupation in the Cliff Swallow

Hess C.1999
Student Paper

Pre-dispersal seed predation by <i>Hylemya</i> sp. in a plant hybrid zone of <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i> and <i>I. tenuituba</i>

Crawford M.1999
Student Paper

Division of labor and worker caste efficiency in the western thatching ant Formica obscuripes

Carter C.1999
Article

Foraging trade-offs along a predator-permanence gradient in subalpine wetlands

Scott A. Wissinger, Howard H. Whiteman, Grace B. Sparks, Gretchen L. Rouse, Wendy S. Brown, Foraging Trade-Offs along a Predator-Permanence Gradient in Subalpine Wetlands, Ecology, Vol. 80, No. 6 (Sep., 1999), pp. 2102-2116

Wissinger S. A., Whiteman H. H., Sparks G. B.1999EcologyDOI: 10.2307/176681Cited 20 times
Article

Courtship behavior in a polymorphic population of the Tiger Salamander, <i>Ambystoma tigrinum nebulosum</i>

Whiteman H. H., Gutrich J. J., Moorman R. S.1999Journal of Herpetology
Article

Bumblebee foraging responses to variation in floral scent and color in snapdragons (Antirrhinum: Scrophulariaceae)

We examined the roles of floral scent and color in attracting bumblebees (Bombus spp.) to snapdragon flowers (Antirrhinum, Sonnet cultivar). Corolla color differences covaried with differences in floral scent emissions in two inbred lines of snapdragon. White-flowered plants emitted methyl cinnamate

Odell E., Raguso R. A., Jones K. N.1999American Midland NaturalistDOI: 10.1674/0003-0031(1999)142[0257:bfrtvi]2.0.co;2Cited 58 times