Do mothers really know best? Complexities in testing the preference-performance hypothesis in polyphagous frugivorous fruit flies.

scientific article

Do mothers really know best? Complexities in testing the preference-performance hypothesis in polyphagous frugivorous fruit flies. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1017/S0007485317001213
P698PubMed publication ID29198205

P50authorMartín Ramón Aluja Schuneman HoferQ17621877
P2093author name stringA Birke
P2860cites workMixture-amount design and response surface modeling to assess the effects of flavonoids and phenolic acids on developmental performance of Anastrepha ludensQ30775475
Neural limitations in phytophagous insects: implications for diet breadth and evolution of host affiliationQ34102229
Host plant range of a fruit fly community (Diptera: Tephritidae): does fruit composition influence larval performance?Q36138889
Fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) host status determination: critical conceptual, methodological, and regulatory considerations.Q36945056
Nutritional and non-nutritional food components modulate phenotypic variation but not physiological trade-offs in an insectQ37200440
A meta-analysis of preference-performance relationships in phytophagous insects.Q37681023
Importance of competition mechanisms in successive invasions by polyphagous tephritids in La ReunionQ38980597
Toxic effects of lemon peel constituents on Ceratitis capitataQ44867215
Host selection by an insect herbivore with spatially variable density dependence.Q46212277
Variability in plant nutrients reduces insect herbivore performanceQ46467800
Do Fruit Ripening Volatiles Enable Resource Specialism in Polyphagous Fruit Flies?Q46494463
Limits to the host range of the highly polyphagous tephritid fruit fly Anastrepha ludens in its natural habitat.Q46673783
Susceptibility of 15 mango (Sapindales: Anacardiaceae) cultivars to the attack by Anastrepha ludens and Anastrepha obliqua (Diptera: Tephritidae) and the role of underdeveloped fruit as pest reservoirs: management implicationsQ46914824
Individual advantages to ecological specialization: insights on cognitive constraints from three conspecific taxa.Q51189585
Bringing back the fruit into fruit fly-bacteria interactions.Q51713271
On optimal oviposition behavior in phytophagous insects.Q52430953
Anastrepha ludens and Anastrepha serpentina (Diptera: Tephritidae) do not infest Psidium guajava (Myrtaceae), but Anastrepha obliqua occasionally shares this resource with Anastrepha striata in nature.Q52726821
Good genes, oxidative stress and condition-dependent sexual signals.Q54102453
Agroecosystem resilience to an invasive insect species that could expand its geographical range in response to global climate changeQ56452865
Simultaneous tests of the preference-performance and phylogenetic conservatism hypotheses: is either theory useful?Q57005405
Five commercial citrus rate poorly as hosts of the polyphagous fruit flyBactrocera tryoni(Froggatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae) in laboratory studiesQ57005419
Is a mango just a mango? Testing within-fruit oviposition site choice and larval performance of a highly polyphagous fruit flyQ57005456
Bactrocera dorsalispreference for and performance on two mango varieties at three stages of ripenessQ57005469
The evolutionary improbability of ‘generalism’ in nature, with special reference to insectsQ57032179
Ecological StatisticsQ60568625
The roles of adult and larval specialisations in limiting the occurrence of five species of Dacus (Diptera: tephritidae) in cultivated fruitsQ87584929
P433issue5
P921main subjectfrugivoryQ98515292
P304page(s)674-684
P577publication date2017-12-04
P1433published inBulletin of Entomological ResearchQ15763806
P1476titleDo mothers really know best? Complexities in testing the preference-performance hypothesis in polyphagous frugivorous fruit flies
P478volume108

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cites work (P2860)
Q90324773Comparative demography of Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) and Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann) (Diptera: Tephritidae) on deciduous fruit
Q92612128Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference-performance relationships on different brassicaceous species