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Browsing publications by
Dr Christina Halpin.
Newcastle Authors
Title
Year
Full text
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Candy Rowe
The effect of distastefulness and conspicuous coloration on the post-attack rejection behaviour of predators and survival of prey
2017
Dr Christina Halpin
Dr John Skelhorn
Professor Candy Rowe
The Impact of Detoxification Costs and Predation Risk on Foraging: Implications for Mimicry Dynamics
2017
Dr John Skelhorn
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Candy Rowe
Learning about aposematic prey
2016
Karen Smith
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Candy Rowe
The benefits of being toxic to deter predators depends on prey body size
2016
Dr John Skelhorn
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Candy Rowe
What do predators do? A response to comments on Skelhorn et al.
2016
Karen Smith
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Candy Rowe
Body size matters for aposematic prey during predator aversion learning
2014
Dr Christina Halpin
Dr John Skelhorn
Professor Candy Rowe
Increased predation of nutrient-enriched aposematic prey
2014
Marion Chatelain
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Candy Rowe
Ambient temperature influences birds' decisions to eat toxic prey
2013
Dr Christina Halpin
Dr John Skelhorn
Professor Candy Rowe
Predators' decisions to eat defended prey depend on the size of undefended prey
2013
Professor Candy Rowe
Dr Christina Halpin
Why are warning displays multimodal?
2013
Dr Christina Halpin
Dr John Skelhorn
Professor Candy Rowe
The relationship between sympatric defended species depends upon predators’ discriminatory behaviour
2012
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Candy Rowe
Taste-rejection behaviour by predators can promote variability in prey defences
2010
Dr Akheel Syed
Dr Christina Halpin
Professor Julie Irving
Professor Nigel Unwin
Professor Martin White
et al.
A common intron 2 polymorphism of the glucocorticoid receptor gene is associated with insulin resistance in men
2008
Dr Christina Halpin
Dr John Skelhorn
Professor Candy Rowe
Being conspicuous and defended: Selective benefits for the individual
2008
Dr Christina Halpin
Dr John Skelhorn
Professor Candy Rowe
Naïve predators and selection for rare conspicuous defended prey: the initial evolution of aposematism revisited
2008