Pages that link to "Q56962302"
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The following pages link to Ben D. Moore (Q56962302):
Displaying 50 items.
- Get Tough, Get Toxic, or Get a Bodyguard: Identifying Candidate Traits Conferring Belowground Resistance to Herbivores in Grasses (Q28468425) (← links)
- Revisiting the dietary niche: When is a mammalian herbivore a specialist? (Q29308294) (← links)
- Amino acid-mediated impacts of elevated carbon dioxide and simulated root herbivory on aphids are neutralized by increased air temperatures (Q30870292) (← links)
- Responses of leaf beetle larvae to elevated [CO₂] and temperature depend on Eucalyptus species. (Q30881222) (← links)
- Climate change, nutrition and immunity: Effects of elevated CO2 and temperature on the immune function of an insect herbivore (Q31032611) (← links)
- Insect herbivory in a mature Eucalyptus woodland canopy depends on leaf phenology but not CO2 enrichment. (Q31137767) (← links)
- Male-biased predation and its effect on paternity skew and life history in a population of common brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula). (Q34456674) (← links)
- Early Root Herbivory Impairs Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Colonization and Shifts Defence Allocation in Establishing Plantago lanceolata. (Q34804948) (← links)
- Do multiple herbivores maintain chemical diversity of Scots pine monoterpenes? (Q34845375) (← links)
- Explaining intraspecific diversity in plant secondary metabolites in an ecological context (Q35015487) (← links)
- Effects of elevated temperature and CO2 on aboveground-belowground systems: a case study with plants, their mutualistic bacteria and root/shoot herbivores (Q35052351) (← links)
- Eucalyptus foliar chemistry explains selective feeding by koalas (Q35972364) (← links)
- Above-Belowground Herbivore Interactions in Mixed Plant Communities Are Influenced by Altered Precipitation Patterns (Q35980252) (← links)
- Plant secondary metabolites and vertebrate herbivores--from physiological regulation to ecosystem function (Q36154052) (← links)
- Novel In vitro Procedures for Rearing a Root-Feeding Pest (Heteronychus arator) of Grasslands (Q37215122) (← links)
- Shrub encroachment is linked to extirpation of an apex predator (Q39029103) (← links)
- Putting plant resistance traits on the map: a test of the idea that plants are better defended at lower latitudes (Q39260870) (← links)
- Inter-population differences in the tolerance of a marsupial folivore to plant secondary metabolites. (Q39964723) (← links)
- Correlations between physical and chemical defences in plants: tradeoffs, syndromes, or just many different ways to skin a herbivorous cat? (Q43408867) (← links)
- Glucuronuria in the koala (Q44549727) (← links)
- Antiherbivore chemistry of Eucalyptus-cues and deterrents for marsupial folivores (Q45179069) (← links)
- Self-medication: a learning process? (Q45355556) (← links)
- Tree use by koalas in a chemically complex landscape (Q46511100) (← links)
- Four species of arboreal folivore show differential tolerance to a secondary metabolite (Q46873242) (← links)
- Feeding rates of a mammalian browser confirm the predictions of a 'foodscape' model of its habitat (Q46939540) (← links)
- A hot lunch for herbivores: physiological effects of elevated temperatures on mammalian feeding ecology (Q48054564) (← links)
- A faecal index of diet quality that predicts reproductive success in a marsupial folivore. (Q51270506) (← links)
- Palatability mapping: a koala's eye view of spatial variation in habitat quality (Q51612981) (← links)
- The effects of plant defensive chemistry on nutrient availability predict reproductive success in a mammal (Q51664209) (← links)
- A simple, integrative assay to quantify nutritional quality of browses for herbivores (Q51892472) (← links)
- Spatial correlations between browsing on balsam fir by white-tailed deer and the nutritional value of neighboring winter forage. (Q54943848) (← links)
- Use of expert knowledge to elicit population trends for the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) (Q57199115) (← links)
- Pinus sylvestris sapling growth and recovery from mammalian browsing (Q57616143) (← links)
- Silicon uptake by a pasture grass experiencing simulated grazing is greatest under elevated precipitation (Q59793149) (← links)
- Root herbivore performance suppressed when feeding on a jasmonate-induced pasture grass (Q60292451) (← links)
- Translating physiological signals to changes in feeding behaviour in mammals and the future effects of global climate change (Q61510473) (← links)
- Continuous monitoring of feeding by koalas highlights diurnal differences in tree preferences (Q61510505) (← links)
- The effect of plant secondary metabolites on the interplay between the internal and external environments of marsupial folivores (Q61510524) (← links)
- Precipitation, not CO2 enrichment, drives insect herbivore frass deposition and subsequent nutrient dynamics in a mature Eucalyptus woodland (Q61857554) (← links)
- Translating nutritional ecology from the laboratory to the field: milestones in linking plant chemistry to population regulation in mammalian browsers (Q62518193) (← links)
- FOLIAR NUTRITION, SITE QUALITY, AND TEMPERATURE INFLUENCE FOLIAR CHEMISTRY OF TALLOWWOOD (EUCALYPTUS MICROCORYS) (Q62518227) (← links)
- A review of feeding and diet selection in koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus) (Q62518236) (← links)
- (Q62518237) (← links)
- Climate warming and plant biomechanical defences: Silicon addition contributes to herbivore suppression in a pasture grass (Q62518326) (← links)
- Mapping Foliar Nutrition Using WorldView-3 and WorldView-2 to Assess Koala Habitat Suitability (Q62518329) (← links)
- Interspecific and intraspecific relationships between body mass and diet quality in a macropodid community (Q62518333) (← links)
- Root responses to domestication, precipitation and silicification: weeping meadow grass simplifies and alters toughness (Q62518337) (← links)
- Climate and atmospheric change impacts on sap-feeding herbivores: a mechanistic explanation based on functional groups of primary metabolites (Q62518342) (← links)
- Temporal and spatial trends in the abundances of an apex predator, introduced mesopredator and ground-nesting bird are consistent with the mesopredator release hypothesis (Q62518343) (← links)
- Atmospheric change and induced plant secondary metabolites — are we reshaping the building blocks of multi-trophic interactions? (Q62518344) (← links)