Search results for "foraging"

showing 10 items of 204 documents

Can obligatory omnivore carabids be useful for the biocontrol of weeds?

2017

National audience; Many thousands of carabid individuals exist in farm fields, in communities of carnivore and opportunistic (e.g. granivores) and obligate omnivore guilds. As carabids can eat a substantial amount of weed seeds they are considered as credible biocontrol agents for the regulation of weeds in arable fields. Some studies have suggested that “granivores” are more important biocontrol agents than obligate omnivorous species. Yet, in some instances, obligate omnivores are very abundant and appear to drive the predation of weeds leading some authors to question whether specialist natural enemies are better. Moreover, niche complementarity, facilitation and interference (i.e. intra…

[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE] Environmental Sciencescarabids[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]intraspecific competitioninterspecific competition[SDE]Environmental Sciences[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biology[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologypredationforaging behaviour
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Chemical Ecology of Insect Parasitoids: Essential Elements for Developing Effective Biological Control Programmes

2013

Insect parasitoids can find their hosts in complex environments and reproduce through a series of behavioural steps which are regulated mainly by chemical cues, termed semiochemicals. According to functional criteria, stimuli can be classified into four main categories: (A) cues coming from the habitat, the host microhabitat or the food plant, (B) direct host‐related cues, (C) indirect host‐related cues, and (D) cues coming from the parasitoid itself. In recent years, considerable progress has been made in elucidating the semiochemicals used by parasitoids to locate their hosts. Several studies provided interesting prospective for manipulating foraging behaviour of parasitoids in order to i…

biological control programmesemiochemicalsEcologysemiochemicals foraging behaviourmedia_common.quotation_subjectnatural enemieBiological pest controlchemical ecologyInsectBiologyChemical ecologySettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E Applicatainsect parasitoidparasitoid behavioural manipulationNatural enemiesmedia_common
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Age and ovarian development are related to worker personality and task allocation in the ant Leptothorax acervorum

2014

Abstract In social insects, workers of different morphological castes and age are known to act differently. Yet, it is unclear how body size and ovarian development influence worker personalities (i.e. consistent behavioral variation) and task allocation in similar aged ant workers of monomorphic species. Behavioral variation is thought to be a key element of division of labor, but few studies have linked worker personality to task allocation. We investigated individual behavior in Leptothorax acervorum ant workers at two time points during the first three months of their life and in two different settings. We observed worker behavior in the nest (i.e. task allocation) and in standardized a…

biologyAggressionmedia_common.quotation_subjectForagingbiology.organism_classificationPersonality psychologyTask (project management)NestPersonality typeLeptothorax acervorummedicinePersonalityAnimal Science and Zoologymedicine.symptomPsychologyDemographymedia_commonCurrent Zoology
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Predatory behavior in the genusLeptogenys: A comparative study

1997

We studied the predatory behavior of seven species of the genusLeptogenys from Mexico and Cameroon. The ants of this genus are armed with long, thin, curved mandibles articulated at the extreme corners of the anterior margin of the head, permitting them easily to seize oniscoid isopods, the obligate or the principal prey of mostLeptogenys species. Workers hunt these prey, which are able to roll themselves up, solitarily. Foraging behavior comprises sequences of up to eight activities. The prey can be seized by the body (rolled up or not), or alternatively by the edge of the shell, then turned over and stung on the ventral face. A relationship between the mandible size of the workers and the…

biologyEcologyForagingHymenopterabiology.organism_classificationAttractionPredationMandible (arthropod mouthpart)LeptogenysAculeataAnimal ecologyInsect Sciencebehavior and behavior mechanismsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Insect Behavior
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Behavioural responses of Eurasian treecreepers, Certhia familiaris, to competition with ants

1997

Competition for a specific resource that is essential for the survival of both the competitors may be intense even between very dissimilar taxa. However, the importance of the effects caused by such interspecific competition has seldom been emphasized. These effects can appear as differences in individual foraging behaviour during the breeding season, which can result in critical variation in fitness. In this study we examined the effects of wood ants (Formica rufa group) on the abundance of other invertebrates on tree trunks and on the foraging site selection of breeding Eurasian treecreepers, which use the same habitat as wood ants. Arthropods were scarcer on the trunks with ants present;…

biologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectForagingInterspecific competitionCerthia familiarisbiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)HabitatSeasonal breederAnimal Science and ZoologyTreecreeperEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInvertebratemedia_commonAnimal behaviour
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Personality and body condition have additive effects on motivation to feed in Zebra Finches Taeniopygia guttata

2012

Several hypotheses have been proposed to account for the adaptive evolution of person-ality, defined as inter-individual differences in behaviour that are consistent over timeand across situations. For instance, the ‘pace-of-life syndrome’ hypothesis suggests thatpersonality evolved as a behavioural correlate of life-history trajectories that vary withinpopulations. Thus, proactivity, corresponding to higher exploratory tendencies or higherboldness levels, has been linked to higher productivity or mortality rates. However, theextent to which proactivity is associated with a higher motivation to forage remainspoorly understood. Moreover, although personality and its effects on foraging behavi…

biologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectForagingProactivitybiology.organism_classificationDevelopmental psychologySexual selectionPersonalityAnimal Science and ZoologyBig Five personality traitsPsychologyZebra finchEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBody conditionTaeniopygiamedia_commonIbis
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Feeding ecology of the loggerhead turtle Caretta caretta in the western Mediterranean

2001

We studied the feeding ecology of juvenile loggerhead turtles Caretta caretta in the western Mediterranean based on the contents of the digestive tract of 54 turtles (range of CCL: 34–69 cm) seized in Barcelona (Spain) in 1991. Turtles had been captured in fishing trawls, but specific information about dates and localities is not available. Despite this limitation, we obtained interesting evidences about the foraging strategies of loggerheads, with potentially important conservation implications. We report 33 new taxa in the diet. Results indicated that western Mediterranean loggerheads feed in an opportunistic way. Numerically, fish made up the most important prey group, followed by pelagi…

biologyForagingFishingPelagic zonebiology.organism_classificationlaw.inventionPredationFisherySea turtleHabitatlawJuvenileAnimal Science and ZoologyTurtle (robot)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Food-attraction conditioning in the snail, Helix pomatia

1995

Adult pulmonate snails (Helix pomatia) were released equidistant between two types of food, carrot and potato, respectively. Naive snails moved in different directions and did not locate either food above chance, although both foods were readily eaten upon direct contact. After a single carrot feeding episode, 75% of the carrot-fed snails moved directly towards the carrot and ate it. Conversely, potato-fed snails located the potato in 67% of the cases. Snails that were fed apple or lettuce behaved like naive animals, with the majority of animals (75% in both cases) locating neither the carrot nor the potato. The ability of snails to locate this particular food after a single feeding episode…

biologyPhysiologyHelix (gastropod)fungidigestive oral and skin physiologyForagingOlfactory cuesfood and beveragesZoologyHelix pomatiaSnailbiology.organism_classificationAttractionBehavioral NeuroscienceOdorbiology.animalparasitic diseasesBotanyConditioningAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Comparative Physiology A
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Behavioral response of the egg parasitoid Ooencyrtus telenomicida to host-related chemical cues in a tritrophic perspective

2010

The response of the generalist egg parasitoid Ooencyrtus telenomicida (Vassiliev) (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae) to host-related chemical cues from tomato plants, Solanum lycopersicum L., and adults of Nezara viridula (L.) (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) was investigated in laboratory-based no-choice and paired-choice tests. In Y-tube olfactometer experiments, when female wasps were exposed to volatiles from plants in different conditions, they were attracted only to volatiles produced by N. viridula adult-infested tomato plants. When female wasps were exposed to adults of N. viridula, they were attracted to volatiles from virgin males, and, at a lower level, to volatiles from mated females in preov…

biologyTomato plants Nezara viridula Host location Foraging behavior Pheromone Kairomones Chemical footprintsfungifood and beveragesZoologyHymenopteraPentatomidaebiology.organism_classificationParasitoidSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataOlfactometerNezara viridulaAnimal ecologyEncyrtidaeInsect ScienceKairomoneBotanyAgronomy and Crop ScienceBioControl
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Spatial Memory Drives Foraging Strategies of Wolves, but in Highly Individual Ways

2022

The ability of wild animals to navigate and survive in complex and dynamic environments depends on their ability to store relevant information and place it in a spatial context. Despite the centrality of spatial memory, and given our increasing ability to observe animal movements in the wild, it is perhaps surprising how difficult it is to demonstrate spatial memory empirically. We present a cognitive analysis of movements of several wolves (Canis lupus) in Finland during a summer period of intensive hunting and den-centered pup-rearing. We tracked several wolves in the field by visiting nearly all GPS locations outside the den, allowing us to identify the species, location and timing of ne…

central place foragingANIMAL MOVEMENTPREYsusieläinten käyttäytyminenHOME-RANGECOLLARED WOLVESdiscrete choice modelingWORKING-MEMORYwolfRESOURCE SELECTIONSPACEPOPULATIONEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsforaging site switchingmuisti (kognitio)reviiritEcologyCANIS-LUPUSsaalistusforaging site fidelityDISCRETE-CHOICE MODELSboundary patrolling1181 Ecology evolutionary biologypredationmovement
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