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Non-associative versus associative learning by foraging predatory mites.

Peter SchausbergerStefan Peneder
Published in: BMC ecology (2017)
Our study shows that both non-associative and associative learning forms operate in foraging predatory mites, N. californicus. The non-rewarded thrips prey experience produced a slightly weaker, but less costly, learning effect than the rewarded experience. We argue that in foraging predatory mites non-associative learning is an inevitable component of associative learning, rather than a separate process.
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