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Barney Luttbeg

Showing results (1-10 of 26) with videos related to

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The American Naturalist|May 18, 2017
Re-examining the Causes and Meaning of the Risk Allocation HypothesisBarney Luttbeg
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences|November 17, 2010
Risk, resources and state-dependent adaptive behavioural syndromesBarney Luttbeg, Andrew Sih
The American Naturalist|February 19, 2004
Comparing alternative models to empirical data: cognitive models of western scrub-jay foraging behaviorBarney Luttbeg, Tom A Langen
Journal of Morphology|July 30, 2017
Allometry and morphometrics of clypeal membrane size and shape in Nicrophorus (Coleoptera: Silphidae)Jillian D Wormington, Barney Luttbeg
The American Naturalist|April 25, 2000
Predator and Prey Models with Flexible Individual Behavior and Imperfect InformationBarney Luttbeg, Oswald J Schmitz
The American Naturalist|January 26, 2013
How the informational environment shapes how prey estimate predation risk and the resulting indirect effects of predatorsBarney Luttbeg, Geoffrey C Trussell
Oecologia|August 7, 2025
Early-life, but not late-life, exposure to predator cues reduce the lifespan and reproductive output of freshwater snailsScott R Goeppner, Barney Luttbeg
Hormones and Behavior|July 3, 2022
Optimal hormonal regulation when stressor cues are imperfectBarney Luttbeg, Jennifer L Grindstaff
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|May 17, 2006
Are scared prey as good as dead?Barney Luttbeg, Jacob L Kerby
The American Naturalist|December 19, 2008
Effects of survival on the attractiveness of cues to natal dispersersJudy Stamps, Barney Luttbeg, V V Krishnan
Pageof 3

Showing results (1-10 of 26) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 3
The American Naturalist|May 18, 2017
Re-examining the Causes and Meaning of the Risk Allocation HypothesisBarney Luttbeg
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences|November 17, 2010
Risk, resources and state-dependent adaptive behavioural syndromesBarney Luttbeg, Andrew Sih
The American Naturalist|February 19, 2004
Comparing alternative models to empirical data: cognitive models of western scrub-jay foraging behaviorBarney Luttbeg, Tom A Langen
Journal of Morphology|July 30, 2017
Allometry and morphometrics of clypeal membrane size and shape in Nicrophorus (Coleoptera: Silphidae)Jillian D Wormington, Barney Luttbeg
The American Naturalist|April 25, 2000
Predator and Prey Models with Flexible Individual Behavior and Imperfect InformationBarney Luttbeg, Oswald J Schmitz
The American Naturalist|January 26, 2013
How the informational environment shapes how prey estimate predation risk and the resulting indirect effects of predatorsBarney Luttbeg, Geoffrey C Trussell
Oecologia|August 7, 2025
Early-life, but not late-life, exposure to predator cues reduce the lifespan and reproductive output of freshwater snailsScott R Goeppner, Barney Luttbeg
Hormones and Behavior|July 3, 2022
Optimal hormonal regulation when stressor cues are imperfectBarney Luttbeg, Jennifer L Grindstaff
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|May 17, 2006
Are scared prey as good as dead?Barney Luttbeg, Jacob L Kerby
The American Naturalist|December 19, 2008
Effects of survival on the attractiveness of cues to natal dispersersJudy Stamps, Barney Luttbeg, V V Krishnan
Pageof 3