Artificial selections for death‐feigning behavior in beetles show correlated responses in amplitude of circadian rhythms, but the period of the rhythm does not
Abstract:One of the most important survival strategies of organisms is to avoid predators. Studying one of such strategies, namely, death‐feigning behavior, has recently become more common. The success or failure of this antipredator strategy will be affected by the circadian rhythms of both prey and predator because death feigning sometimes has a diurnal rhythm. However, few studies have analyzed the effects of differences in circadian rhythms on predator‐avoidance behavior at the genetic level. Recently, the relation… Show more
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