journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38507266/the-complex-circuitry-of-interactions-determining-coexistence-among-plants-and-mycorrhizal-fungi
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark A McPeek, Caitlin Hicks Pries
We present a mechanistic model of coexistence among a mycorrhizal fungus and one or two plant species that compete for a single nutrient. Plant-fungal coexistence is more likely if the fungus is better at extracting the environmental nutrient than the plant and the fungus acquires carbon from the plant above a minimum rate. When they coexist, their interaction can shift from mutualistic to parasitic at high nutrient availability. The fungus is a second nutrient source for plants and can promote the coexistence of two plant competitors if one is better at environmental nutrient extraction and the other is better at acquiring the nutrient from the fungus...
March 20, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38501232/evolution-of-avian-heat-tolerance-the-role-of-atmospheric-humidity
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marc T Freeman, Bianca Coulson, James C Short, Celiwe A Ngcamphalala, Mathome O Makola, Andrew E McKechnie
The role of atmospheric humidity in the evolution of endotherms' thermoregulatory performance remains largely unexplored, despite the fact that elevated humidity is known to impede evaporative cooling capacity. Using a phylogenetically informed comparative framework, we tested the hypothesis that pronounced hyperthermia tolerance among birds occupying humid lowlands evolved to reduce the impact of humidity-impeded scope for evaporative heat dissipation by comparing heat tolerance limits (HTLs; maximum tolerable air temperature), maximum body temperatures (Tb max), and associated thermoregulatory variables in humid (19...
March 19, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38494344/floral-resource-partitioning-of-coexisting-bumble-bees-distinguishing-species-colony-and-individual-level-effects
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhong-Ming Ye, Yong-Deng He, Pedro J Bergamo, Michael C Orr, Wen Huang, Xiao-Fang Jin, Han-Ning Lun, Qing-Feng Wang, Chun-Feng Yang
Resource partitioning is considered a key factor in alleviating competitive interactions, enabling coexistence among consumer species. However, most studies have focused on resource partitioning between species, ignoring the potentially critical role of intraspecific variation in resource use. We investigated floral resource partitioning across species, colonies, and individuals in a species-rich bumblebee community in the diversification center of bumblebees. We used a total of 10,598 bumblebees belonging to 13 species across 5 years in the Hengduan Mountains of southwest China...
March 17, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38483138/host-plant-mediation-of-viral-transmission-and-its-consequences-for-a-native-butterfly
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tara Christensen, Lee A Dyer, Matthew L Forister, M Deane Bowers, Adrian Carper, Mike B Teglas, Paul Hurtado, Angela M Smilanich
Pathogens play a key role in insect population dynamics, contributing to short-term fluctuations in abundance as well as long-term demographic trends. Two key factors that influence the effects of entomopathogens on herbivorous insect populations are modes of pathogen transmission and larval host plants. In this study, we examined tritrophic interactions between a sequestering specialist lepidopteran, Euphydryas phaeton, and a viral pathogen, Junonia coenia densovirus, on its native host plant, Chelone glabra, and a novel host plant, Plantago lanceolata, to explore whether host plant mediates viral transmission, survival, and viral loads...
March 14, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38472111/cue-the-chorus-canyon-treefrog-calling-phenology-on-the-falling-limb-of-spring-floods-and-warming-nights
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Heather L Bateman, Margaret A Huck, Heidi Klingel, David M Merritt
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 12, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38444180/gypsum-lichens-a-global-data-set-of-lichen-species-from-gypsum-ecosystems
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sergio Muriel, Gregorio Aragón, Isabel Martínez, María Prieto
Lichens are significant components of the biological soil crust communities in gypsum ecosystems and are involved in several processes related to ecosystem functioning, such as water and nutrient cycles or protection against soil erosion. Although numerous studies centered on lichen taxonomy and ecology have been performed in these habitats, global information about lichen species from gypsum substrates or their distributional ranges at a global scale is lacking. Thus, we compiled a global data set of recorded lichen species growing on gypsum...
March 5, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38438133/osmotic-responses-and-oceanic-dispersal-of-upper-brackish-nemertean-ecophysiology-from-field-to-in-vitro-observation
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natsumi Hookabe, Yuma Fujino, Hikaru Nagano
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 4, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38426609/restoring-spatiotemporal-variability-to-enhance-the-capacity-for-dispersal-limited-species-to-track-climate-change
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gregory A Backus, Christopher F Clements, Marissa L Baskett
Climate refugia are areas where species can persist through climate change with little to no movement. Among the factors associated with climate refugia are high spatial heterogeneity, such that there is only a short distance between current and future optimal climates, as well as biotic or abiotic environmental factors that buffer against variability in time. However, these types of climate refugia may be declining due to anthropogenic homogenization of environments and degradation of environmental buffers...
March 1, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38425026/brown-bear-digging-decreases-tree-growth-implication-for-ecological-role-of-top-predators-in-anthropogenic-landscapes
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kanji M Tomita, Tsutom Hiura
Large carnivores have recently increased in number and recolonized in human-dominated landscapes; however, their ecological roles in these landscapes have not been well studied. In the Shiretoko World Heritage (SWH) site, brown bears have recolonized a previously abandoned mosaic landscape of natural forests and conifer plantations after land abandonment. We previously reported that the bears had recently begun to dig for cicada nymphs in association with the creation of larch plantations. As a result, this digging activity decreased soil nutrients...
February 29, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38419360/evaluating-top-down-bottom-up-and-environmental-drivers-of-pelagic-food-web-dynamics-along-an-estuarine-gradient
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tanya L Rogers, Samuel M Bashevkin, Christina E Burdi, Denise D Colombano, Peter N Dudley, Brian Mahardja, Lara Mitchell, Sarah Perry, Parsa Saffarinia
Identification of the key biotic and abiotic drivers within food webs is important for understanding species abundance changes in ecosystems, particularly across ecotones where there may be strong variation in interaction strengths. Using structural equation models (SEMs) and four decades of integrated data from the San Francisco Estuary, we investigated the relative effects of top-down, bottom-up, and environmental drivers on multiple trophic levels of the pelagic food web along an estuarine salinity gradient and at both annual and monthly temporal resolutions...
February 28, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38415343/dispersal-synchronizes-giant-kelp-forests
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Miriam S Wanner, Jonathan A Walter, Daniel C Reuman, Tom W Bell, Max C N Castorani
Spatial synchrony is the tendency for population fluctuations to be correlated among different locations. This phenomenon is a ubiquitous feature of population dynamics and is important for ecosystem stability, but several aspects of synchrony remain unresolved. In particular, the extent to which any particular mechanism, such as dispersal, contributes to observed synchrony in natural populations has been difficult to determine. To address this gap, we leveraged recent methodological improvements to determine how dispersal structures synchrony in giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), a global marine foundation species that has served as a useful system for understanding synchrony...
February 28, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38404022/speed-and-degree-of-functional-and-compositional-recovery-varies-with-latitude-and-community-age
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mariana Bonfim, Diana P López, Michele F Repetto, Amy L Freestone
Rates at which a community recovers after disturbance, or its resilience, can be accelerated by increased net primary productivity and recolonization dynamics such as recruitment. These mechanisms can vary across biogeographic gradients, such as latitude, suggesting that biogeography is likely important to predicting resilience. To test whether community resilience, informed by functional and compositional recovery, hinges on geographic location, we employed a standardized replicated experiment on marine invertebrate communities across four regions from the tropics to the subarctic zone...
February 25, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38400588/early-warning-indicators-capture-catastrophic-transitions-driven-by-explicit-rates-of-environmental-change
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ramesh Arumugam, Frederic Guichard, Frithjof Lutscher
In response to external changes, ecosystems can undergo catastrophic transitions. Early warning indicators aim to predict such transitions based on the phenomenon of critical slowing down at bifurcation points found under a constant environment. When an explicit rate of environmental change is considered, catastrophic transitions can become distinct phenomena from bifurcations, and result from a delayed response to noncatastrophic bifurcations. We use a trophic metacommunity model where transitions in time series and bifurcations of the system are distinct phenomena...
February 23, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38385889/food-quality-shapes-gradual-phenotypic-plasticity-in-ectotherms-facing-temperature-variability
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marine Van Baelen, Alexandre Bec, Erik Sperfeld, Nathan Frizot, Apostolos-Manuel Koussoroplis
Organisms exhibit reversible physiological adjustments as a response to rapidly changing environments. Yet such plasticity of the phenotype is gradual and may lag behind environmental fluctuations, thereby affecting long-term average performance of the organisms. By supplying energy and essential compounds for optimal tissue building, food determines the range of possible phenotypic changes and potentially the rate at which they occur. Here, we assess how differences in the dietary supply of essential lipids modulate the phenotypic plasticity of an ectotherm facing thermal fluctuations...
February 22, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38380597/long-term-drought-promotes-invasive-species-by-reducing-wildfire-severity
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah Kimball, Jessica Rath, Julie E Coffey, Moises R Perea-Vega, Matthew Walsh, Nicole M Fiore, Priscilla M Ta, Katharina T Schmidt, Michael L Goulden, Steven D Allison
Anthropogenic climate change has increased the frequency of drought, wildfire, and invasions of non-native species. Although high-severity fires linked to drought can inhibit recovery of native vegetation in forested ecosystems, it remains unclear how drought impacts the recovery of other plant communities following wildfire. We leveraged an existing rainfall manipulation experiment to test the hypothesis that reduced precipitation, fuel load, and fire severity convert plant community composition from native shrubs to invasive grasses in a Southern California coastal sage scrub system...
February 21, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38369779/using-the-multivariate-hawkes-process-to-study-interactions-between-multiple-species-from-camera-trap-data
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lisa Nicvert, Sophie Donnet, Mark Keith, Mike Peel, Michael J Somers, Lourens H Swanepoel, Jan Venter, Hervé Fritz, Stéphane Dray
Interspecific interactions can influence species' activity and movement patterns. In particular, species may avoid or attract each other through reactive responses in space and/or time. However, data and methods to study such reactive interactions have remained scarce and were generally limited to two interacting species. At this time, the deployment of camera traps opens new opportunities but adapted statistical techniques are still required to analyze interaction patterns with such data. We present the multivariate Hawkes process (MHP) and show how it can be used to analyze interactions between several species using camera trap data...
February 18, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38363004/masting-fire-stimulated-flowering-and-the-evolutionary-ecology-of-synchronized-reproduction
#37
REVIEW
Jared J Beck, Mark J McKone, Stuart Wagenius
Synchronized episodic reproduction among long-lived plants shapes ecological interactions, ecosystem dynamics, and evolutionary processes worldwide. Two active scientific fields investigate the causes and consequences of such synchronized reproduction: the fields of masting and fire-stimulated flowering. While parallels between masting and fire-stimulated flowering have been previously noted, there has been little dialogue between these historically independent fields. We predict that the synthesis of these fields will facilitate new insight into the causes and consequences of synchronized reproduction...
February 16, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38361277/coexistence-mechanism-of-sympatric-predaceous-diving-beetle-larvae
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Reiya Watanabe, Shin-Ya Ohba, Shiro Sagawa
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 15, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38361276/estimation-and-interpretation-problems-and-solutions-when-using-proportion-covariates-in-linear-regression-models
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Denis Valle, Jeffrey Mintz, Ismael Verrastro Brack
Proportion variables, also known as compositional data, are very common in ecology. Unfortunately, few scientists are aware of how compositional data, when used as covariates, can adversely impact statistical analysis. We describe here how proportion covariates result in multicollinearity and parameter identifiability problems. Using simulated data on bird species richness as a function of land use, we show how these problems manifest when fitting a wide range of models in R, both in a frequentist and Bayesian framework...
February 15, 2024: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38361248/cougars-wolves-and-humans-drive-a-dynamic-landscape-of-fear-for-elk
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taylor R Ganz, Melia T DeVivo, Aaron J Wirsing, Sarah B Bassing, Brian N Kertson, Savanah L Walker, Laura R Prugh
To manage predation risk, prey navigate a dynamic landscape of fear, or spatiotemporal variation in risk perception, reflecting predator distributions, traits, and activity cycles. Prey may seek to reduce risk across this landscape using habitat at times and in places when predators are less active. In multipredator landscapes, avoiding one predator could increase vulnerability to another, making the landscape of fear difficult to predict and navigate. Additionally, humans may shape interactions between predators and prey, and induce new sources of risk...
February 15, 2024: Ecology
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