[HTML][HTML] Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference–performance relationships on different brassicaceous species

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - Oecologia, 2020 - Springer
The preference–performance hypothesis (PPH) states that herbivorous female insects prefer
to oviposit on those host plants that are best for their offspring. Yet, past attempts to show the …

Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference-performance relationships on different brassicaceous species.

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - 2020 - cabidigitallibrary.org
The preference-performance hypothesis (PPH) states that herbivorous female insects prefer
to oviposit on those host plants that are best for their offspring. Yet, past attempts to show the …

[PDF][PDF] Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference-performance relationships on different brassicaceous species 2

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - academia.edu
According to the preference-performance hypothesis (PPH), also known as 'mother-knows-
best 19 hypothesis', herbivorous insects prefer those plants for oviposition, which yield the …

[PDF][PDF] Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference–performance relationships on different brassicaceous species

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - …, 2020 - researchgate.net
The preference–performance hypothesis (PPH) states that herbivorous female insects prefer
to oviposit on those host plants that are best for their offspring. Yet, past attempts to show the …

Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference–performance relationships on different brassicaceous species

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - Oecologia, 2020 - hal.science
The preference-performance hypothesis (PPH) states that herbivorous female insects prefer
to oviposit on those host plants that are best for their offspring. Yet, past attempts to show the …

[PDF][PDF] Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference-performance relationships on different brassicaceous species 2

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - scholar.archive.org
According to the preference-performance hypothesis (PPH), also known as 'mother-knows-
best 19 hypothesis', herbivorous insects prefer those plants for oviposition, which yield the …

[HTML][HTML] Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference–performance relationships on different brassicaceous species

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - Oecologia, 2020 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The preference–performance hypothesis (PPH) states that herbivorous female insects prefer
to oviposit on those host plants that are best for their offspring. Yet, past attempts to show the …

Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference-performance relationships on different brassicaceous species

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi… - …, 2020 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The preference-performance hypothesis (PPH) states that herbivorous female insects prefer
to oviposit on those host plants that are best for their offspring. Yet, past attempts to show the …

[引用][C] Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference-performance relationships on different brassicaceous species

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi… - …, 2020 - ui.adsabs.harvard.edu
Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference-performance relationships
on different brassicaceous species - NASA/ADS Now on home page ads icon ads Enable full …

[PDF][PDF] Plant responses to butterfly oviposition partly explain preference–performance relationships on different brassicaceous species

E Griese, A Pineda, FG Pashalidou, EP Iradi, M Hilker… - Oecologia, 2020 - core.ac.uk
The preference–performance hypothesis (PPH) states that herbivorous female insects prefer
to oviposit on those host plants that are best for their offspring. Yet, past attempts to show the …