Foraging on a variety of different food items allows individuals to balance nutrient intake, but it also may dilute toxins present in single items of the diet. The distinction between nutrient balancing and toxin dilution becomes less clear, however, for organisms that sequester potentially toxic compounds for their own benefit. Additionally, specific dietary components chosen may or may not affect metabolic rate, growth, and other measures of fitness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInferences about the evolution of defensive strategies in tiger beetles (genus Cicindela) have been contentious, largely due to the lack of a phylogenetic hypothesis for the group. We used a dataset that includes measures of chemical defense, habitat association, and body coloration for a representative sample of North American Cicindela (Pearson et al. 1988) to reassess, within a phylogenetic context, the problem of covariation in defensive strategies.
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