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Stomach fullness modulates prey size choice in the frillfin goby, Bathygobius soporator
(Elsevier Gmbh, Urban & Fischer Verlag, 2012-10-01)
Behaviours related to foraging and feeding in predator-prey systems are fundamental to our understanding of food webs. From the perspective of a predator, the selection of prey size depends upon a number of factors including ...
The mystery of how spiders extract food without masticating prey
(2006)
Standard accounts of how spiders obtain food without masticating their prey are probably largely wrong. Species in the families Uloboridae, Thomisidae, Araneidae and Theridiidae do not inject digestive fluid into the prey’s ...
Stomach fullness modulates prey size choice in the frillfin goby, Bathygobius soporator
(Elsevier Gmbh, Urban & Fischer Verlag, 2012-10-01)
Behaviours related to foraging and feeding in predator-prey systems are fundamental to our understanding of food webs. From the perspective of a predator, the selection of prey size depends upon a number of factors including ...
Consuming Costly Prey: Optimal Foraging and the Role of Compensatory Growth
(2021-03-18)
Some prey are exceptionally difficult to digest, and yet even non-specialized animals may consume them—why? Durophagy, the consumption of hard-shelled prey, is thought to require special adaptations for crushing or digesting ...
Stomach fullness modulates prey size choice in the frillfin goby, Bathygobius soporator
(Elsevier Gmbh, Urban & Fischer Verlag, 2014)
Prey digestion in the midgut of the predatory bug Podisus nigrispinus (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae)
(PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTDOXFORD, 2012)
Pre-oral digestion is described as the liquefaction of the solid tissues of the prey by secretions of the predator. It is uncertain if pre-oral digestion means pre-oral dispersion of food or true digestion in the sense of ...
Feeding by Philoponella vicina (Araneae, Uloboridae) and how uloborid spiders lost their venom glands
(2006)
Feeding by uloborid spiders is unusual in several respects: cheliceral venom glands are absent; prey wrapping is extensive (up to several hundred metres of silk line) and severely compresses the prey; the spider’s mouthparts ...
Tie them up tight: wrapping by Philoponella vicinaspiders breaks, compresses and sometimes kills their prey
(2006)
We show that uloborid spiders, which lack the poison glands typical of nearly all other spiders, employ thousands of wrapping movements with their hind legs and up to hundreds of meters of silk line to make a shroud that ...
Predation ability of freshwater crabs: age and prey-specific differences in Trichodactylus borellianus (Brachyura: Trichodactylidae)
(Taylor & Francis, 2013-06)
Freshwater crabs are rarely represented in food webs and their role in these ecosystems has been largely ignored. Trichodactylus borellianus is an omnivorous crab species that has a diverse natural trophic spectrum. This ...