Avoiding attack: the evolutionary ecology of crypsis, aposematism, and mimicry GD Ruxton, WL Allen, TN Sherratt, MP Speed Oxford University Press, 2019 | 1694 | 2019 |
The biology of color IC Cuthill, WL Allen, K Arbuckle, B Caspers, G Chaplin, ME Hauber, ... Science 357 (6350), 2017 | 233 | 2017 |
Masquerade: camouflage without crypsis J Skelhorn, HM Rowland, MP Speed, GD Ruxton Science 327 (5961), 51-51, 2010 | 169 | 2010 |
Muellerian mimicry and the psychology of predation MP Speed Animal Behaviour 45 (3), 571-580, 1993 | 152 | 1993 |
Warning signals, receiver psychology and predator memory MP Speed Animal Behaviour 60 (3), 269-278, 2000 | 147 | 2000 |
Co-mimics have a mutualistic relationship despite unequal defences HM Rowland, E Ihalainen, L Lindström, J Mappes, MP Speed Nature 448 (7149), 64-67, 2007 | 136 | 2007 |
Warning displays may function as honest signals of toxicity JD Blount, MP Speed, GD Ruxton, PA Stephens Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 276 (1658), 871-877, 2009 | 114 | 2009 |
What, if anything, is the adaptive function of countershading? GD Ruxton, MP Speed, DJ Kelly Animal Behaviour 68 (3), 445-451, 2004 | 110 | 2004 |
Learning and memory in mimicry: II. Do we understand the mimicry spectrum? MP Speed, JRG Turner Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 67 (3), 281-312, 1999 | 106 | 1999 |
Can't tell the caterpillars from the trees: countershading enhances survival in a woodland HM Rowland, IC Cuthill, IF Harvey, MP Speed, GD Ruxton Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 275 (1651), 2539-2545, 2008 | 96 | 2008 |
Batesian, quasi-Batesian or Müllerian mimicry? Theory and data in mimicry research MP Speed Evolutionary Ecology 13 (7-8), 755-776, 1999 | 95 | 1999 |
How bright and how nasty: explaining diversity in warning signal strength MP Speed, GD Ruxton Evolution 61 (3), 623-635, 2007 | 93 | 2007 |
Can receiver psychology explain the evolution of aposematism? MP Speed Animal Behaviour 61 (1), 205-216, 2001 | 86 | 2001 |
Warning displays in spiny animals: one (more) evolutionary route to aposematism MP Speed, GD Ruxton Evolution 59 (12), 2499-2508, 2005 | 85 | 2005 |
Natural selection on unpalatable species imposed by state-dependent foraging behaviour TN Sherratt, MP Speed, GD Ruxton Journal of Theoretical Biology 228 (2), 217-226, 2004 | 78 | 2004 |
Aposematism: what should our starting point be? MP Speed, GD Ruxton Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 272 (1561), 431-438, 2005 | 72 | 2005 |
Why are defensive toxins so variable? An evolutionary perspective MP Speed, GD Ruxton, J Mappes, TN Sherratt Biological Reviews 87 (4), 874-884, 2012 | 70 | 2012 |
How the ladybird got its spots: effects of resource limitation on the honesty of aposematic signals JD Blount, HM Rowland, FP Drijfhout, JA Endler, R Inger, JJ Sloggett, ... Functional Ecology 26 (2), 334-342, 2012 | 70 | 2012 |
Testing Müllerian mimicry: an experiment with wild birds MP Speed, NJ Alderson, C Hardman, GD Ruxton Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences …, 2000 | 69 | 2000 |
Learning and memory in mimicry. I. Simulations of laboratory experiments JRG Turner, MP Speed Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B …, 1996 | 61 | 1996 |