Monarch butterflies do not place all of their eggs in one basket: oviposition on nine Midwestern milkweed species
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Title
Monarch butterflies do not place all of their eggs in one basket: oviposition on nine Midwestern milkweed species
Authors
Keywords
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Journal
Ecosphere
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages e02064
Publisher
Wiley
Online
2018-01-13
DOI
10.1002/ecs2.2064
References
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Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Restoring monarch butterfly habitat in the Midwestern US: ‘all hands on deck’
- (2017) Wayne E Thogmartin et al. Environmental Research Letters
- Regional climate on the breeding grounds predicts variation in the natal origin of monarch butterflies overwintering in Mexico over 38 years
- (2017) D. T. Tyler Flockhart et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Performance of Early Instar Monarch Butterflies (Danaus plexippus L.) on Nine Milkweed Species Native to Iowa
- (2017) Victoria M. Pocius et al. JOURNAL OF THE LEPIDOPTERISTS SOCIETY
- Interpreting surveys to estimate the size of the monarch butterfly population: Pitfalls and prospects
- (2017) John M. Pleasants et al. PLoS One
- A trans-national monarch butterfly population model and implications for regional conservation priorities
- (2016) KAREN OBERHAUSER et al. ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY
- Consequences of toxic secondary compounds in nectar for mutualist bees and antagonist butterflies
- (2016) Patricia L. Jones et al. ECOLOGY
- Milkweed restoration in the Midwest for monarch butterfly recovery: estimates of milkweeds lost, milkweeds remaining and milkweeds that must be added to increase the monarch population
- (2016) John Pleasants Insect Conservation and Diversity
- Monarchs in decline: a collateral landscape-level effect of modern agriculture
- (2016) Carl Stenoien et al. Insect Science
- Movement and egg laying in Monarchs: To move or not to move, that is the equation
- (2015) M. P. Zalucki et al. AUSTRAL ECOLOGY
- Unravelling the annual cycle in a migratory animal: breeding-season habitat loss drives population declines of monarch butterflies
- (2014) D. T. Tyler Flockhart et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
- Cardenolides in nectar may be more than a consequence of allocation to other plant parts: a phylogenetic study ofAsclepias
- (2012) Jessamyn S. Manson et al. FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
- Milkweed loss in agricultural fields because of herbicide use: effect on the monarch butterfly population
- (2012) JOHN M. PLEASANTS et al. Insect Conservation and Diversity
- First-instar monarch larval growth and survival on milkweeds in southern California: effects of latex, leaf hairs and cardenolides
- (2011) Myron P. Zalucki et al. CHEMOECOLOGY
- Latitudinal patterns in plant defense: evolution of cardenolides, their toxicity and induction following herbivory
- (2011) Sergio Rasmann et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Decline of monarch butterflies overwintering in Mexico: is the migratory phenomenon at risk?
- (2011) LINCOLN P. BROWER et al. Insect Conservation and Diversity
- Dispersal and egg shortfall in Monarch butterflies: what happens when the matrix is cleaned up?
- (2010) MYRON P. ZALUCKI et al. ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY
- Dynamics of oviposition in Danaus plexippus (Insecta: Lepidoptera) on milkweed, Asclepias spp
- (2009) M. P. Zalucki et al. JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
- PHYLOGENETIC TRENDS IN PHENOLIC METABOLISM OF MILKWEEDS (ASCLEPIAS): EVIDENCE FOR ESCALATION
- (2008) Anurag A. Agrawal et al. EVOLUTION
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