4.5 Article

Do scatter hoarders trade off increased predation risks for lower rates of cache pilferage?

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Thieving rodents as substitute dispersers of megafaunal seeds

Patrick A. Jansen et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2012)

Article Ecology

Acorn dispersal by rodents: The importance of re-dispersal and distance to shelter

Ramon Perea et al.

BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY (2011)

Article Plant Sciences

Linking seed dispersal to cache protection strategies

Alberto Munoz et al.

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (2011)

Review Biology

How plants manipulate the scatter-hoarding behaviour of seed-dispersing animals

Stephen B. Vander Wall

PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2010)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Scatter hoarding by the Central American agouti: a test of optimal cache spacing theory

Dumas Galvez et al.

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR (2009)

Article Ornithology

Hyper-dispersed cache distributions reduce pilferage: a laboratory study

Lucinda H. Male et al.

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY (2008)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Hyperdispersed cache distributions reduce pilferage: a field study

Lucinda H. Male et al.

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR (2007)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Memory for food caches: not just for retrieval

Lucinda H. Male et al.

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY (2007)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Cache spacing patterns and reciprocal cache theft in New Zealand robins

Jayden Van Horik et al.

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR (2007)

Article Ecology

Effects of seed size on dispersal distance in five rodent-dispersed fagaceous species

ZS Xiao et al.

ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (2005)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Rodent foraging is affected by indirect, but not by direct, cues of predation risk

JL Orrock et al.

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY (2004)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Reciprocal pilferage and the evolution of food-hoarding behavior

SB Vander Wall et al.

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY (2003)