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During spread in the new range, invasive plants may evolve distinctive traits that make them rapidly occupy the suitable and empty sites at the invasion front, such as rapid growth rate and high seed dispersal ability. However, less is known about how competitive ability evolves during range expansion, and no study has examined whether stand biomass (i.e. biomass production of dense monocultural stands,...
Evolutionary dynamics are subject to constraints ranging from limitations on what is physically possible to limitations on the pathways that evolution can take. One set of evolutionary constraints, known as ‘demographic constraints', constrain what can occur evolutionarily due to the demographic or dynamical consequences of evolution leading to conditions that make populations susceptible to extinction...
Parasites are known to mediate trophic interactions and can, for example, modify how consumers acquire resources. These modifications of host feeding behaviour can be imposed through three interconnected mechanisms affecting: 1) host food acquisition, 2) host food digestion or 3) host energy budgets. As a result, infected hosts may consume more, less or the same amount of food compared to their uninfected...
The consequences of community metrics (e.g. co‐flowering diversity and floral density) and plant traits (e.g. pollinator dependency and trait similarity) on pollen limitation (PL) may depend on pollinator‐mediated competitive or facilitative interactions among plants in co‐flowering communities, which could vary with community contexts (i.e. different altitude communities) and under human disturbances...
Despite the dynamic nature of communities, most research typically treated interaction networks as static entities, and only a few analysed the spatial and the temporal scales simultaneously. Here, we used spatial and temporal multilayer networks to explore the persistence of species and interactions in space and time, as well as the variation of species role (centrality) according to biotic factors...
Understanding how wildfires affect food web structure and function remains an important challenge, especially at high elevations that historically have burned infrequently. In particular, fires may alter the magnitude of reciprocal cross‐ecosystem subsidies, leading to indirect effects on aquatic and terrestrial consumers. We quantified characteristics of high‐elevation (2500–3000 m) stream‐riparian...
The Dialogue series is intended to promote critical thinking and the expression of contrasting or even opposing viewpoints on important ecological topics. Here, seven researchers debate the use of the Price equation, a framework that has long been used in evolution to analyze temporal changes in the frequency of traits and alleles. This Dialogue describes different philosophical and mathematical perspectives...
Males and females often desynchronise their mating activity during the breeding season (intersexual phenological asynchrony). This suggests that the two sexes differentially use environmental cues to initiate seasonal reproduction, and climate change may cause phenological shifts in a sex‐specific manner, subsequently altering frequency distribution of mating attempts over time and influencing the...
Plant‐available silicon (Si) concentrations vary considerably across tropical soils, yet the ecological importance of that variation remains largely unresolved. Increased Si availability can enhance growth and modulate foliar nutrient status in many crop species suggesting similar effects might occur in natural systems. However, how growth, foliar Si and macronutrient concentrations as well as their...
The resource‐availability hypothesis (RAH) and the intraspecific RAH (RAHintra), posit that resources, (i.e. nutrients) control plant antiherbivore defenses. Both hypotheses predict that in low‐resource environments, plant growth is slow, and constitutive defense is high. In high‐resource environments, however, the RAH predicts that plant growth is fast, and constitutive defense is low, whereas the...
Transgenerational effects enable the transmission of environmental cues from parents to offspring. Adaptive maternal effects are expected to evolve if the maternal (or parental) environment contains information about the environment experienced by offspring. This correlation between maternal and offspring environments should be strongest in plant species with reduced dispersal ability. However, studies...
For marine fishes, stressors such as ocean warming, biological invasions, and fisheries are suggested to drive depth redistributions. However, it is uncertain whether depth redistribution can act to offset the fitness costs associated with adverse changing conditions and allow species to maintain abundance. To better understand the relationship between global changes and depth redistribution, we synthesized...
Spatial segregation of foraging areas among conspecifics breeding in neighbouring colonies has been observed in several colonial vertebrates and is assumed to originate from competition and information use. Segregation between foraging individuals breeding in different parts of a same colony has comparatively received limited attention, even though it may have strong impacts on colony structure and...
Climate change is shifting the phenological timing, duration, and temporal overlap of interacting species in natural communities, reshaping temporal interaction networks worldwide. Despite much recent progress in documenting these phenological shifts, little is known about how the phenologies of species interactions are tracked across different life history stages. Here we analyze four key phenological...
Communities composed of small populations are predicted to be strongly influenced by stochastic demographic events and, thus, less affected by environmental selection than those composed of large populations. However, this prediction has only been tested with computer simulations, simplified controlled experiments, and limited observational data. Here, using multiple datasets on fish abundance in...
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