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Ecological and evolutionary implications of diet in monitor lizards
JONATHAN B. LOSOS
, HARRY W. GREENE
Department of Biology
Arts & Sciences
Roy and Diana Vagelos Division of Biology & Biomedical Sciences (DBBS)
DBBS - Evolution, Ecology and Population Biology
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
150
Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
Ecological Implications
100%
Evolutionary Implications
100%
Monitor Lizard
100%
Varanus
100%
Lizard
66%
Large Prey
66%
Prey Type
66%
Vertebrates
33%
Activity Level
33%
Invertebrates
33%
Natural History
33%
Microenvironment
33%
Large Mammals
33%
Seasonal Variation
33%
Geographic Variation
33%
Orthopteran
33%
Body Activity
33%
Chemoreception
33%
Predation
33%
Habitat Selection
33%
Temperature Level
33%
Prey Size
33%
Varanidae
33%
Area Search
33%
High Body Temperature
33%
Prey Specialization
33%
Helodermatidae
33%
Ontogenetic Variation
33%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Monitor Lizard
100%
Varanus
100%
Evolution
100%
Ingestion
66%
Feeds
33%
Natural History
33%
Orthoptera
33%
Microhabitat
33%
Varanidae
33%
Helodermatidae
33%
Body Temperature
33%
Predation
33%
Snail
33%