Title: Chapter 6 Opener
1Chapter 6 Opener
2Figure 6.1 Mobbing behavior of colonial,
ground-nesting gulls
3Figure 6.2 A nesting colony of black-headed
gulls
4Figure 6.3 An arms race with a winner?
5Figure 6.4 Does mobbing protect eggs?
6Figure 6.5 Benefit of high nest density for the
arctic skua
7Figure 6.6 Gull phylogeny and two scenarios for
the origin of cliff-nesting behavior
8Figure 6.6 Gull phylogeny and two scenarios for
the origin of cliff-nesting behavior (Part 1)
9Figure 6.6 Gull phylogeny and two scenarios for
the origin of cliff-nesting behavior (Part 2)
10Figure 6.7 Not all gulls nest on the ground
11Figure 6.8 The logic of the comparative method
12Figure 6.9 Colonial California ground squirrels
mob their snake enemies
13Figure 6.10 The dilution effect in butterfly
groups
14Figure 6.11 A recently hatched black-necked stilt
15Figure 6.12 The dilution effect in mayflies
16Figure 6.13 Fighting back by terns and wasps
17Figure 6.14 Communal defense by sawfly larvae
18Figure 6.15 A group of sleeping bees
19Figure 6.16 Cryptic coloration depends on
background selection
20Figure 6.17 The camouflaged moth, Biston
betularia
21Figure 6.18 Predation risk and background
selection by moths
22Figure 6.19 Cryptic coloration and body
orientation
23Figure 6.20 Does cryptic behavior work?
24Figure 6.21 Safety lies in false edges for prey
that exploit their predators edge detectors
25Figure 6.22 Personal hygiene by a skipper
butterfly larva may be an antipredator adaptation
26Figure 6.23 Warning coloration and toxins
27Figure 6.24 Effect of monarch butterfly toxins
28Figure 6.25 Why behave conspicuously?
29Figure 6.26 An advertisement of unprofitability
to deter pursuit?
30Figure 6.27 Cheetahs abandon hunts more often
when gazelles stot
31Figure 6.28 Are pushup displays an honest signal
of a lizards physiological condition?
32Figure 6.29 The lizard Cnemidophorus murinus
often waves a foreleg at humans that disturb it
33Figure 6.30 An optimality model
34Figure 6.31 Optimal covey size for northern
bobwhite quail
35Figure 6.31 Optimal covey size for northern
bobwhite quail
36Figure 6.31 Optimal covey size for northern
bobwhite quail
37Figure 6.31 Optimal covey size for northern
bobwhite quail
38Figure 6.32 Selfish herds may evolve in prey
species
39Figure 6.33 Redshanks form selfish herds
40Figure 6.34 A game theoretical model
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