Search results for "competition risk"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Effets de la variabilité inter-individuelles et des interactions intra-guildes sur les stratégies d'approvisionnement de carabes consommateurs de gra…

2017

Making a choice requires, implicitly, an investment of time in one behaviour at the expense of an investment in another. Being choosy would increase the risk of losing many food item opportunities to competitors, and is directly in conflict with other essential tasks such as predator avoidance. Individuals are thus expected to adjust their level of choosiness in response to the competition and predation context. The available behavioural ecological theory and the empirical ecology of carabids would suggest that competition and predation interference induces changes in the foraging behaviour of carabid individuals. Carabids typically operate within communities in which competition and predat…

[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences[SDV.SA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences[SDV.BA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyBehavioural flexibility[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyImmunityRisques de prédation et compétitionPredation and competition risk[ SDV.BA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biology[ SDV.EE ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environmentPersonalité animaleFléxibilité comportementale[SDV.EE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environmentCarabid beetlesForaging strategyCarabesImmunité[ SDV.SA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesPersonalityStratégie d'approvisionnement
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Quantity Estimation Based on Numerical Cues in the Mealworm Beetle (Tenebrio molitor)

2012

In this study, we used a biologically relevant experimental procedure to ask whether mealworm beetles (Tenebrio molitor) are spontaneously capable of assessing quantities based on numerical cues. Like other insect species, mealworm beetles adjust their reproductive behavior (i.e., investment in mate guarding) according to the perceived risk of sperm competition (i.e., probability that a female will mate with another male). To test whether males have the ability to estimate numerosity based on numerical cues, we staged matings between virgin females and virgin males in which we varied the number of rival males the experimental male had access to immediately preceding mating as a cue to sperm…

Mealwormquantity estimationmedia_common.quotation_subjectquantity discriminationlcsh:BF1-990ZoologyInsectsperm competitionGood evidencePsychologyMatingnumerical cognitionSperm competitionGeneral Psychologyreproductive and urinary physiologymedia_commonTenebrio molitorOriginal Researchnumerosity discriminationsperm competition risknumerositymate guardingMate guardingbiologyEcologyNumerosity adaptation effectbiology.organism_classificationInsectslcsh:PsychologyFrontiers in Psychology
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Effect of inter-individual variability and intraguild interferences on the foraging strategies of seed-eating carabid species

2017

Making a choice requires, implicitly, an investment of time in one behaviour at the expense of an investment in another. Being choosy would increase the risk of losing many food item opportunities to competitors, and is directly in conflict with other essential tasks such as predator avoidance. Individuals are thus expected to adjust their level of choosiness in response to the competition and predation context. The available behavioural ecological theory and the empirical ecology of carabids would suggest that competition and predation interference induces changes in the foraging behaviour of carabid individuals. Carabids typically operate within communities in which competition and predat…

competition risk[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE] Environmental Sciencesimmunity defensepersonalityCarabidspredation riskbehavioural flexibilityforaging strategy[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologythesebehaviour
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