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      Geometrical Games between a Host and a Parasitoid

      , ,
      The American Naturalist
      University of Chicago Press

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          An Experimental Test of the Effects of Predation Risk on Habitat Use in Fish

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            Trade-off between parasitoid resistance and larval competitive ability in Drosophila melanogaster.

            The extent to which an organism is selected to invest in defences against pathogens and parasites depends on the advantages that ensue should infection occur, but also on the costs of maintaining defences in the absence of infection. The presence of heritable variation in resistance suggests that costs exist, but we know very little about the nature or magnitude of these costs in natural populations of animals. A powerful technique for identifying trade-offs between fitness components is the study of correlated responses to artificial selection. We have selected Drosophila melanogaster for improved resistance against an endoparasitoid, Asobara tabida. Endoparasitoids are insects whose larvae develop internally within the body of other insects, eventually killing them, although their hosts can sometimes survive attack by mounting a cellular immune response. We found that reduced larval competitive ability in unparasitized D. melanogaster is a correlated response to artificial selection for improved resistance against A. tabida. The strength of selection for competitive ability and parasitoid resistance is likely to vary temporally and spatially, which may explain the observed heritable variation in resistance.
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              Influence of a predator on the optimal foraging behaviour of sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.)

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The American Naturalist
                The American Naturalist
                University of Chicago Press
                0003-0147
                1537-5323
                September 2000
                September 2000
                : 156
                : 3
                : 257-265
                Article
                10.1086/303388
                8e3214fd-44d5-4260-a7aa-5a5b7f420da1
                © 2000
                History

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