William H. Cade, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Biological Sciences University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada 
Area:
Sexual Selection, Animal Behaviour, Entomology
Website:
http://people.uleth.ca/~bill.cade/
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"William Cade"
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Publications

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Gray DA, Kunerth HD, Zuk M, et al. (2019) Molecular biogeography and host relations of a parasitoid fly. Ecology and Evolution. 9: 11476-11493
McCarthy TM, Keyes J, Cade WH. (2013) Phonotactic Behavior of Male Field Crickets (Gryllus texensis) in Response to Acoustic Calls From Conspecific Males Journal of Insect Behavior. 26: 634-648
Bell HC, Judge KA, Johnson EA, et al. (2012) How is a cricket like a rat? Insights from the application of cybernetics to evasive food protective behaviour Animal Behaviour. 84: 843-851
Logue DM, Takahashi AD, Cade WH. (2011) Aggressiveness and size: a model and two tests. The American Naturalist. 177: 202-10
Logue DM, Abiola IO, Rains D, et al. (2010) Does signalling mitigate the cost of agonistic interactions? A test in a cricket that has lost its song. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 277: 2571-5
CADE WH. (2010) Field Cricket Spacing, and the Phonotaxis of Crickets and Parasitoid Flies to Clumped and Isolated Cricket Songs Zeitschrift FüR Tierpsychologie. 55: 365-375
Logue DM, Mishra S, McCaffrey D, et al. (2009) A behavioral syndrome linking courtship behavior toward males and females predicts reproductive success from a single mating in the hissing cockroach, Gromphadorhina portentosa Behavioral Ecology. 20: 781-788
Gray DA, Banuelos C, Walker SE, et al. (2007) Behavioural specialization among populations of the acoustically orienting parasitoid fly Ormia ochracea utilizing different cricket species as hosts Animal Behaviour. 73: 99-104
Walker SE, Cade WH. (2003) A simulation model of the effects of frequency dependence, density dependence and parasitoid flies on the fitness of male field crickets Ecological Modelling. 169: 119-130
Gray DA, Walker TJ, Conley BE, et al. (2001) A morphological means of distinguishing females of the cryptic field cricket species, Gryllus rubens and G. texensis (Orthoptera: Gryllidae) Florida Entomologist. 84: 314-315
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