Interactions between hard-shelled marine mollusks such as clams and snails and their predators play a critical but largely unseen role in shaping coastal ecosystems. These organisms help stabilize ...
Migrator ypredators may link the evolution of distant species, carrying learned fear toward prey that never actually meet.
Weather shapes the natural world in ways that go far beyond comfort. For predators, every shift in temperature, every drop of ...
Marine predator–prey interactions underpin the structure and function of coastal, pelagic and deep-sea environments. Predation exerts top-down control on prey populations, driving evolutionary ...
Second: "Predators eat significantly smaller prey whose size range does not vary with their own size." These are, for example, baleen whales, which filter feed on krill regardless of age, size or ...
Mathematical models of predator–prey interactions provide a quantitative framework for understanding how populations of consumers and their resources fluctuate over time and space. Beginning with the ...