Climbing to reach females: Romeo should be small J Moya‐Laraño, J Halaj, DH Wise Evolution 56 (2), 420-425, 2002 | 159 | 2002 |
Analysing body condition: mass, volume or density? J Moya‐Laraño, R Macías‐Ordóñez, WU Blanckenhorn, ... Journal of Animal Ecology 77 (6), 1099-1108, 2008 | 156 | 2008 |
Sexual size dimorphism in spiders: patterns and processes MW Foellmer, J Moya-Larano Sex, size and gender roles: evolutionary studies of sexual size dimorphism …, 2007 | 131 | 2007 |
Plotting partial correlation and regression in ecological studies J Moya-Laraño, G Corcobado Web Ecology 8 (1), 35-46, 2008 | 87 | 2008 |
Direct and indirect effects of ants on a forest‐floor food web J Moya-Laraño, DH Wise Ecology 88 (6), 1454-1465, 2007 | 87 | 2007 |
Genetic variation, predator–prey interactions and food web structure J Moya-Laraño Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 366 …, 2011 | 70 | 2011 |
Optimal climbing speed explains the evolution of extreme sexual size dimorphism in spiders J Moya‐Laraño, D Vinković, CM Allard, MW Foellmer Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22 (5), 954-963, 2009 | 66 | 2009 |
Smaller beetles are better scramble competitors at cooler temperatures J Moya-Laraño, MET El-Sayyid, CW Fox Biology Letters 3 (5), 475-478, 2007 | 66 | 2007 |
Sex‐specific plasticity of growth and maturation size in a spider: implications for sexual size dimorphism C Fernández‐Montraveta, J Moya‐Laraño Journal of Evolutionary Biology 20 (5), 1689-1699, 2007 | 65 | 2007 |
Senescence and food limitation in a slowly ageing spider J Moya-Larano Functional Ecology, 734-741, 2002 | 64 | 2002 |
Survival regression analysis: a powerful tool for evaluating fighting and assessment J Moya-Laraño, DH Wise Animal Behaviour 60 (3), 307-313, 2000 | 59 | 2000 |
Morphological evolution of spiders predicted by pendulum mechanics J Moya-Larano, D Vinković, E De Mas, G Corcobado, E Moreno PLoS One 3 (3), e1841, 2008 | 57 | 2008 |
Diet affects female mating behaviour in a seed‐feeding beetle CW Fox, J MOYA‐LARAÑO Physiological Entomology 34 (4), 370-378, 2009 | 56 | 2009 |
Mating patterns in late-maturing female Mediterranean tarantulas may reflect the costs and benefits of sexual cannibalism J Moya-Laraño, J Pascual, DH Wise Animal Behaviour 66 (3), 469-476, 2003 | 53 | 2003 |
Intriguing compensation by adult female spiders for food limitation experienced as juveniles J Moya‐Laraño, JM Orta‐Ocaña, JA Barrientos, C Bach, DH Wise Oikos 101 (3), 539-548, 2003 | 53 | 2003 |
Territoriality in a cannibalistic burrowing wolf spider J Moya-Laraño, JM Orta-Ocaña, JA Barrientos, C Bach, DH Wise Ecology 83 (2), 356-361, 2002 | 53 | 2002 |
Sexual cannibalism: high incidence in a natural population with benefits to females R Rabaneda-Bueno, MA Rodriguez-Girones, S Aguado-de-la-Paz, ... PLoS One 3 (10), e3484, 2008 | 52 | 2008 |
Introducing the refined gravity hypothesis of extreme sexual size dimorphism G Corcobado, MA Rodríguez-Gironés, E De Mas, J Moya-Laraño BMC Evolutionary Biology 10, 1-14, 2010 | 51 | 2010 |
Ejaculate size, second male size, and moderate polyandry increase female fecundity in a seed beetle J Moya-Laraño, CW Fox Behavioral Ecology 17 (6), 940-946, 2006 | 49 | 2006 |
Climate change and eco-evolutionary dynamics in food webs J Moya-Laraño, O Verdeny-Vilalta, J Rowntree, N Melguizo-Ruiz, ... Advances in ecological research 47, 1-80, 2012 | 48 | 2012 |