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Reduced mobility is associated with compensatory feeding and increased diet breadth of marine crabs
1999
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Direct effects of predation have been widely recognized as important in affecting prey population dynamics and evolution. However, less attention has been devoted to the consequences of indirect effects of predators on prey behavior. For example, to avoid predation many animals restrict their activities to physical refugia and adopt low-mobility Mestyles, yet the consequences of these antipredator behaviors for foraging and diet selection are relatively unknown. In this study we examine the
doi:10.3354/meps188169
fatcat:rrwh3acf2jhnpkwslzkuzc22ke