Search results
Results: 58
Number of items: 58
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Sabelis, M. W., van Rijn, P. C. J., & Janssen, A. (2005). Fitness consequences of food-for-protection strategies in plants. In F. L. Wackers, P. C. J. van Rijn, & J. Bruin (Eds.), Plant-provided food for carnivorous insects: A protective mutualism and its applications. (pp. 109-134). Cambridge University Press.
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van Rijn, P. C. J., Bakker, F. M., van der Hoeven, W. A. D., & Sabelis, M. W. (2005). Is arthropod predation exclusively satiation-driven? Oikos, 109, 101-116. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0030-1299.2005.12987.x
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van Rijn, P. C. J., van Houten, Y. M., & Sabelis, M. W. (2002). How plants benefit from providing food to predators when it is also edible to herbivores. Ecology, 83(10), 2664-2679. https://doi.org/10.2307/3072005 -
van Baalen, J. N., Krivan, V., van Rijn, P. C. J., & Sabelis, M. W. (2001). Alternative food, switching predators, and the persistence of predator-prey systems. American Naturalist, 157, 512-524. https://doi.org/10.1086/319933
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Faraji, F., Janssen, A., van Rijn, P. C. J., & Sabelis, M. W. (2000). Kin recognition by the predatory mite Iphiseius degenerans: discrimination among own, conspecific and heterospecific eggs. Ecological Entomology, 25(2), 147-155. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2311.2000.00240.x -
van Rijn, P. C. J., & Sabelis, M. W. (1999). Should plants provide food for predators when it also benefits the herbivores? The effects of pollen on a thrips-predatory mite system. In G. R. Needham, R. Mitchell, & D. J. Horn (Eds.), Acarology IX: Vol. 2 Symposia (pp. 227-231). Ohio Biological Survey.
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