Humans and monkeys are both primates, and Ebola feeds on primates in same way that a predator consumes certain kinds of flesh.
Prey switching is frequency-dependent predation, where the predator preferentially consumes the most common type of prey.
After fertilization, there is still a high chance that predators may consume the vulnerable juveniles.
Further concentration through bioaccumulation occurs along the food chain, as predators consume selenium rich prey.
Top predators consume fishes and/or large invertebrates.
A sit-and-wait predator with a voracious appetite, this gluttonous frog consumes almost anything that can be swallowed whole.
However, if bycatch is quickly released, predators and scavengers may consume its biomass.
Holling's disk equation models the efficiency at which predators consume prey.
Apostatic selection, whereby a predator consumes a common morph whilst overlooking rarer morphs is possible and does occur.
The predators considered in this chapter generally consume most or all of the bodies of their prey.