A skewed literature: Few studies evaluate the contribution of predation-risk effects to natural field patterns Article

Peacor, Scott D, Dorn, Nathan J, Smith, Justine A et al. (2022). A skewed literature: Few studies evaluate the contribution of predation-risk effects to natural field patterns . ECOLOGY LETTERS, 25(9), 2048-2061. 10.1111/ele.14075

Open Access

cited authors

  • Peacor, Scott D; Dorn, Nathan J; Smith, Justine A; Peckham, Nicole E; Cherry, Michael J; Sheriff, Michael J; Kimbro, David L

sustainable development goals

authors

publication date

  • September 1, 2022

published in

keywords

  • DEMOGRAPHY
  • DIVERSITY
  • ECOLOGY
  • Ecology
  • Environmental Sciences & Ecology
  • FOOD
  • IMPACTS
  • LIFE-HISTORY
  • Life Sciences & Biomedicine
  • MEDIATED TROPHIC CASCADES
  • PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY
  • POPULATIONS
  • SCALING-UP
  • Science & Technology
  • fear
  • natural experiment
  • non-consumptive
  • non-lethal
  • observational
  • plasticity
  • predation risk
  • process from pattern
  • trait mediated
  • trait response

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

publisher

  • WILEY

start page

  • 2048

end page

  • 2061

volume

  • 25

issue

  • 9