Adaptive host preferance and the dynamics of host-parasitoid interactions
From MaRDI portal
DOI10.1006/TPBI.1999.1419zbMATH Open0960.92031OpenAlexW2091473326WikidataQ73294869 ScholiaQ73294869MaRDI QIDQ1581349FDOQ1581349
Authors: Peter A. Abrams, Tadeusz J. Kawecki
Publication date: 7 May 2001
Published in: Theoretical Population Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1006/tpbi.1999.1419
Recommendations
- Adaptive superparasitism and host-parasitoid dynamics
- Behavioral stabilization of host-parasite population dynamics
- Searching for food or hosts: The influence of parasitoids behavior on host-parasitoid dynamics
- The evolution of developmental timing in natural enemy systems
- Autoparasitism, interference, and parasitoid-pest population dynamics.
Cites Work
Cited In (17)
- Coevolutionary patterns caused by prey selection
- On the evolution of specialization with a mechanistic underpinning in structured metapopulations
- Incorporating mating preferences into a host-parasite model
- Attack by a common parasitoid stabilizes population dynamics of multi-host communities
- Multiple attractors in host-parasitoid interactions: coexistence and extinction
- The prevalence of asymmetrical indirect effects in two-host-one-parasitoid systems
- Host coexistence in a model for two host-one parasitoid interactions
- Direct plant-predator interactions as determinants of food chain dynamics
- Effects of host interspecific interaction in the Maculinea-Myrmica parasite-host system
- The effects of predator evolution and genetic variation on predator-prey population-level dynamics
- The invadability of a host in host-parasitoid systems
- Escaping the evolutionary trap: can size-related contest advantage compensate for juvenile mortality disadvantage when parasitoids develop in unnatural invasive hosts?
- Autoparasitism, interference, and parasitoid-pest population dynamics.
- The role of variability and risk on the persistence of shared-enemy, predator-prey assemblages
- Behavioral stabilization of host-parasite population dynamics
- The evolution of developmental timing in natural enemy systems
- The roles of spatial heterogeneity and adaptive movement in stabilizing (or destabilizing) simple metacommunities
This page was built for publication: Adaptive host preferance and the dynamics of host-parasitoid interactions
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q1581349)