نتایج جستجو برای: conspecific tree

تعداد نتایج: 174063  

2015
Dionyssia A. Maselou Dionyssios Ch. Perdikis Maurice W. Sabelis Argyro A. Fantinou Nicolas Desneux

Multiple predator effects (MPEs) can modify the strength of pest regulation, causing positive or negative deviations from those that are predicted from independent effects of isolated predators. Despite increasing evidence that omnivory can shape predator-prey interactions, few studies have examined the impact of alternative plant food on interactions between multiple predators. In the present ...

Journal: :Annals of botany 2016
Heather M Briggs Lucy M Anderson Laila M Atalla André M Delva Emily K Dobbs Berry J Brosi

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Most pollinators are generalists and therefore are likely to transfer heterospecific pollen among co-flowering plants. Most work on the impacts of heterospecific pollen deposition on plant fecundity has utilized hand-pollination experiments in greenhouse settings, and we continue to know very little about the reproductive effects of heterospecific pollen in field settings. ...

2016
Jan‐Hendrik Dudenhöffer Gesine Pufal Christiane Roscher Alexandra‐Maria Klein

Janzen-Connell effects are negative effects on the survival of a plant's progeny at high conspecific densities or close to its conspecifics. Although the role of Janzen-Connell effects on the maintenance of plant diversity was frequently studied, only few studies targeted Janzen-Connell effects via postdispersal seed predation in temperate grassland systems. We examined effects of conspecific d...

2018
Brian Folt Maureen A Donnelly Craig Guyer

The conspecific attraction hypothesis predicts that individuals are attracted to conspecifics because conspecifics may be cues to quality habitat and/or colonists may benefit from living in aggregations. Poison frogs (Dendrobatidae) are aposematic, territorial, and visually oriented-three characteristics which make dendrobatids an appropriate model to test for conspecific attraction. In this st...

Journal: :Animal behaviour 2000
Gentner Hulse

Data from several field studies support the hypothesis that female European starlings, Sturnus vulgaris, attend to variation among the songs of conspecific males when making mate-choice decisions. However, for a variety of methodological reasons, direct evidence for female preferences based on song in starlings has been lacking. This study presents a novel technique for assaying directly female...

2012
Dian Yu Tobias Teichert Vincent P. Ferrera

Primates live in complex social groups and rely on social cues to direct their attention. For example, primates react faster to an unpredictable stimulus after seeing a conspecific looking in the direction of that stimulus. In the current study we tested the specificity of facial cues (gaze direction) for orienting attention and their interaction with other cues that are known to guide attentio...

Journal: :Current Biology 2014
Alexander G. Vaughan Chuan Zhou Devanand S. Manoli Bruce S. Baker

BACKGROUND During courtship, male Drosophila melanogaster sing a multipart courtship song to female flies. This song is of particular interest because (1) it is species specific and varies widely within the genus, (2) it is a gating stimulus for females, who are sensitive detectors of conspecific song, and (3) it is the only sexual signal that is under both neural and genetic control. This song...

Journal: :Palaeontologische Zeitschrift 2021

Abstract Within Isopoda (woodlice and relatives), there are lineages characterised by a parasitic lifestyle that all belong to Cymothoida likely form monophyletic group. Representatives of Epicaridea (ingroup Cymothoida) on crustaceans usually go through three distinct larval stages. The fossil record is sparse thus little known about the palaeoecology origin complex life cycle modern epicaride...

2005
Bob B.M. Wong Heidi S. Fisher Gil G. Rosenthal

Species recognition can often play a key role in female mating preferences. Far less is known about conspecific mate recognition from the male perspective. In many closely related taxa, females exhibit few obvious visual differences and males might have to attend to chemical cues in mate recognition, a possibility that has rarely been explored in vertebrates. Here, we examine male species recog...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2011
Andrew S MacDougall Matthias C Rillig John N Klironomos

Whether dominance drives species loss can depend on the power of conspecific self-limitation as dominant populations expand; these limitations can stabilize competitive imbalances that might otherwise cause displacement. We quantify the relative strength of conspecific and heterospecific soil feedbacks in an exotic-dominated savannah, using greenhouse trials and field surveys to test whether do...

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