Summer World_ A Season of Bounty - Bernd Heinrich [104]
Waldman, B. 1982. “Adaptive Significance of Communal Oviposition in the Wood Frog (Rana sylvatica),” Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 10: 169–174.
Wells, K. D. 1977. “The Social Behaviour of Anuran Amphibians,” Animal Behaviour 25: 666–693.
———. 1977. “Territoriality and Mating Success in the Green Frog (Rana clamitans),” Ecology 58: 750–762.
5. Bald-Faced Hornet Nests
Heinrich, B. 1984. “Strategies of Thermoregulation and Foraging in Two Wasps, Dolichovespula maculata and Vespula vulgaris,” Journal of Comparative Physiology B 154: 175–180.
Levi, P. 1984. The Period Table. Schocken, New York.
6. Mud Daubers and Behavior
Blackledge, T. A., and K. M. Pickett. 2000. “Predatory Interactions between Mud-Dauber Wasps (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae) and Argiope (Aranaeae, Araneidae) in Captivity,” Journal of Arachnology 28: 211–216.
Brockmann, H. J. 1980. “Diversity in the Nesting Behavior of Mud-Daubers (Trypoxylon politum Say: Sphecidae),” Florida Entomologist 63: 53–64.
Heinrich, B., and T. M. Casey. 1978. “Heat Transfer in Dragonflies: ‘Flyers’ and ‘Perchers,’” Journal of Experimental Biology 74: 17–36.
Muma, M. H., and W. F. Jeffers. 1945. “Studies of the Prey of Several Mud-Dauber Wasps,” Annals of the Entomological Society of America 38: 245–257.
O’Neil, K. M., J. F. O’Neil, and R. P. O’Neil. 2007. “Sublethal Effect of Brood Parasitism on the Grass-Carrying Wasp, Isodontia mexicana,” Ecological Entomology 32(1): 123–127.
Shafer, G. D. 1949. The Ways of a Mud Dauber. Stanford University Press, Palo Alto, Calif.
7. The Blues
Als, T. D., R. Vila, N. P. Kandul, et al. 2004. “The Evolution of Alternative Parasitic Life Histories in Large Blue Butterflies,” Nature 432: 386–390.
Bingham, C. T. 1907. “Fauna of British India,” Butterflies 2.
Braby, M. F. 2000. Butterflies of Australia. Melbourne, CSIRO, Vol. 2, pp. 622–623.
Eastwood, R., and A. J. King. 1998. “Observations on the Biology of Arhopala wildei Miskin (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae) and Its Host Ant Polyrhachis queenslandica Emery (Hymenoptera: Formicidae),” Australian Entomologist 25(1): 1–6.
Lohman, D. J., Q. Liao, and N. E. Pierce. 2006. “Convergence of Chemical Mimicry in a Guild of Aphid Predators,” Ecological Entomology 31: 41–51.
8. Artful Diners
Dussourd, D. E., and R. F. Denno. 1991. “Deactivation of Plant Defenses: Correspondence between Insect Behavior and Secretory Canal Architecture,” Ecology 72: 1383–1396.
Greene, E. 1989. “A Diet-Induced Developmental Polymorphism in a Caterpillar,” Science 243: 643–646.
Heinrich, B. 1971. “The Effect of Leaf Geometry on the Feeding Behaviour of the Caterpillar of Manduca sexta (Sphingidae),” Animal Behaviour 19: 119–124.
———. 1979. “Foraging Strategies of Caterpillars: Leaf Damage and Possible Predator Avoidance Strategies,” Oecologia 40: 325–337.
———. 1980. “Artful Diners,” Natural History 86: 42–51.
Heinrich, B., and S. L. Collins. 1983. “Caterpillar Leaf Damage and the Game of Hide-and-Seek with Birds,” Ecology 64: 592–602.
Holmes, R. T., J. C. Schultz, and P. Nothnagle. 1979. “Bird Predation on Forest Insects: An Exclosure Experiment,” Science 206: 462–463.
Real, P. G., R. Ianazzi, A. C. Kamil, and B. Heinrich. 1984. “Discrimination and Generalization of Leaf Damage by Blue Jays (Cyanocitta cristata),” Animal Learning and Behavior 12: 202–208.
Salazar, B. A., and D. W. Whitman. 2001. “Defensive Tactics of Caterpillars against Predators and Parasitoids.” In T. N. Ananthakrishnan (ed.), Insects and Plant Defence Dynamics, pp. 101–207.
Science Publishers, Enfield, N.H.
Stamp, N. E., and T. M. Casey (eds.). 1993. Caterpillars: Ecological and Evolutionary Constraints on Foraging. Chapman and Hall, New York.
Wagner, David, L. 2005. Caterpillars of Eastern North America. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J.
9. Masters of Disguise
Aiello, A., and R. E. Silberglied. 1978. “Life History of Dynastor darius (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: Brassolinae) in Panama,” Psyche 85: 331–345.
Booth, F. W., and P. D. Neufer. 2005. “Exercise Controls Gene Expression,” American Scientist