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      Intraguild scavenging on carnivore carcasses is delayed enough to allow successful dispersal of maggots for pupation

      1 , 2 , 1
      Journal of Zoology
      Wiley

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          R: a language and environment for statistical cmputing

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            Scavenging by vertebrates: behavioral, ecological, and evolutionary perspectives on an important energy transfer pathway in terrestrial ecosystems

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              Scavenging: how carnivores and carrion structure communities.

              Recent advances in the ecology of food webs underscore the importance of detritus and indirect predator-prey effects. However, most research considers detritus as an invariable pool and predation as the only interaction between carnivores and prey. Carrion consumption, scavenging, is a type of detrital feeding that should have widespread consequences for the structure and stability of food webs. Providing access to high-quality resources, facultative scavenging is a ubiquitous and phylogenetically widespread strategy. In this review, we argue that scavenging is underestimated by 16-fold in food-web research, producing inflated predation rates and underestimated indirect effects. Furthermore, more energy is generally transferred per link via scavenging than predation. Thus, future food-web research should consider scavenging, especially in light of how major global changes can affect scavengers. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Journal of Zoology
                Journal of Zoology
                Wiley
                0952-8369
                1469-7998
                July 25 2023
                Affiliations
                [1 ] College of Bioresource Science Nihon University Fujisawa Japan
                [2 ] Biodiversity Research Center Research Institute of Environment, Agriculture and Fisheries, Osaka Prefecture Neyagawa Japan
                Article
                10.1111/jzo.13103
                3769791c-2ab1-4398-a6be-0d9abad8ca5e
                © 2023

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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