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Predator odours attract other predators, creating an olfactory web of informationDoes Historical Coexistence with Dingoes Explain Current Avoidance of Domestic Dogs? Island Bandicoots Are Naïve to Dogs, unlike Their Mainland CounterpartsPredators are attracted to the olfactory signals of prey.When does an alien become a native species? A vulnerable native mammal recognizes and responds to its long-term alien predatorReproductive responses of birds to experimental food supplementation: a meta-analysis.Adult frogs are sensitive to the predation risks of olfactory communication.Competitive naïveté between a highly successful invader and a functionally similar native species.Naïveté in novel ecological interactions: lessons from theory and experimental evidence.Nest Predation by Commensal Rodents in Urban Bushland Remnants.Exploiting olfactory learning in alien rats to protect birds' eggs.Four-legged friend or foe? Dog walking displaces native birds from natural areas.Deadly intentions: naïve introduced foxes show rapid attraction to odour cues of an unfamiliar native prey.Potential 'ecological traps' of restored landscapes: koalas Phascolarctos cinereus re-occupy a rehabilitated mine siteUsing effect size benchmarks to assess when alien impacts are actually alien.Biologically meaningful scents: a framework for understanding predator-prey research across disciplines.Foraging in groups affects giving-up densities: solo foragers quit sooner.Welfare based primate rehabilitation as a potential conservation strategy: does it measure up?Correction: Potential 'Ecological Traps' of Restored Landscapes: Koalas Phascolarctos cinereus Re-Occupy a Rehabilitated Mine Site.Novel predators emit novel cues: a mechanism for prey naivety towards alien predators.Leaf odour cues enable non-random foraging by mammalian herbivores.Follow your nose: leaf odour as an important foraging cue for mammalian herbivores.Increased olfactory search costs change foraging behaviour in an alien mustelid: a precursor to prey switching?Personality affects the foraging response of a mammalian herbivore to the dual costs of food and fear.The dilemma of foraging herbivores: dealing with food and fear.Roles of the volatile terpene, 1,8-cineole, in plant-herbivore interactions: a foraging odor cue as well as a toxin?Quantifying the response of free-ranging mammalian herbivores to the interplay between plant defense and nutrient concentrations.Alien predators are more dangerous than native predators to prey populations.Food quality and conspicuousness shape improvements in olfactory discrimination by mice.Titrating the cost of plant toxins against predators: determining the tipping point for foraging herbivores.Integrating the costs of plant toxins and predation risk in foraging decisions of a mammalian herbivore.Receiving behaviour is sensitive to risks from eavesdropping predators.Influences of Plant Toxins and Their Spatial Distribution on Foraging by the Common Brushtail Possum, a Generalist Mammalian HerbivoreAustralian native mammals recognize and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysisInteracting effects of predation risk and signal patchiness on activity and communication in house miceAlien predation and the effects of multiple levels of prey naivetéAnimal-rights zealots put wildlife welfare at riskUltraviolet properties of Australian mammal urineMolecular identification of the Trypanosoma (Herpetosoma) lewisi clade in black rats (Rattus rattus) from AustraliaOvercoming prey naiveté: Free-living marsupials develop recognition and effective behavioral responses to alien predators in Australia
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description
researcher
@en
wetenschapper
@nl
հետազոտող
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name
Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
@nl
Peter B Banks
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type
label
Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
@en
Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
@nl
Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
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Peter B Banks
@nl
Peter B Banks
@sl
P106
P1153
7201821329
P21
P31
P496
0000-0002-4340-6495