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21 results on '"Segar, Simon T."'

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1. What Goes in Must Come Out? The Metabolic Profile of Plants and Caterpillars, Frass, And Adults of Asota (Erebidae: Aganainae) Feeding on Ficus (Moraceae) in New Guinea.

2. Changes in temperature alter competitive interactions and overall structure of fig wasp communities.

3. Low host specificity and broad geographical ranges in a community of parasitic non-pollinating fig wasps (Sycoryctinae; Chalcidoidea).

4. Molecular mechanisms of mutualistic and antagonistic interactions in a plant-pollinator association.

5. Compound Specific Trends of Chemical Defences in Ficus Along an Elevational Gradient Reflect a Complex Selective Landscape.

6. Faster speciation of fig-wasps than their host figs leads to decoupled speciation dynamics: Snapshots across the speciation continuum.

7. Community structure of insect herbivores is driven by conservatism, escalation and divergence of defensive traits in Ficus.

8. The global phylogeny of the subfamily Sycoryctinae (Pteromalidae): parasites of an obligate mutualism.

9. A role for parasites in stabilising the fig-pollinator mutualism.

10. Species swarms and their caterpillar colonisers: phylogeny and polyphenols determine host plant specificity in New Guinean Lepidoptera.

12. Macroevolution of defense syndromes in Ficus (Moraceae).

13. Contrasting patterns of fig wasp communities along Mt. Wilhelm, Papua New Guinea.

14. Are nematodes costly to fig tree–fig wasp mutualists?

15. Detecting the elusive cost of parasites on fig seed production.

16. Between-species facilitation by male fig wasps in shared figs.

17. How to be a fig wasp down under: The diversity and structure of an Australian fig wasp community.

18. Convergent structure of multitrophic communities over three continents.

19. The dominant exploiters of the fig/pollinator mutualism vary across continents, but their costs fall consistently on the male reproductive function of figs.

20. Conserved community structure and simultaneous divergence events in the fig wasps associated with <italic>Ficus benjamina</italic> in Australia and China.

21. Specialist fig-consuming lepidopterans can inflict costs to plant reproductive success that are mitigated by ant bodyguards.

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