Results 181 to 190 of about 262,989 (332)
Anthropogenically induced changes in environmental conditions have been affecting species communities globally, leading to shifts in ecosystem functioning. Physical drivers like temperature, salinity and acidification are especially important in coastal ecosystems, and high‐resolution time‐series are essential to identify how these variables affect ...
Tjardo Stoffers +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Community- and trophic-level responses of soil nematodes to removal of a non-native tree at different stages of invasion. [PDF]
Peralta G +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Heated Relations: Temperature-Mediated Shifts in Consumption across Trophic Levels
Linda Seifert +5 more
openalex +2 more sources
Annual Reports to the ESA Council ESA 110th Annual Meeting July, 2025
The Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America, EarlyView.
wiley +1 more source
The spatial ecology of stalk‐and‐ambush predators like the Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx depends on prey availability and environmental features, yet the relative roles of these factors remain unclear at large spatial scales. In this study, we analysed lynx habitat use across central and southern Finland using snow‐track data from the Wildlife Triangle ...
Francesca Malcangi +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Sex-differences in fine-scale home-range use in an upper-trophic level marine predator. [PDF]
Lidgard DC, Bowen WD, Iverson SJ.
europepmc +1 more source
Warming summers limit reindeer grazing, weakening herbivory pressure in the mountain tundra
Climate change is predicted to alter species interactions by exposing ecosystems to increasingly frequent and intense warm spells. In the mountain tundra, grazing by large herbivores, particularly reindeer, can limit shrub expansion and preserve Arctic plant diversity.
Marianne Stoessel +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Shifting baselines increase the risk of misinterpreting biodiversity trends
Ecological studies quantifying the impact of land‐use change on biodiversity may be sensitive to the choice of reference points – or baselines – particularly when sampling across human land‐use gradients and other space‐for‐time comparisons. Much depends on whether the chosen baseline has already undergone shifts in species composition because of ...
Ariane Dellavalle +13 more
wiley +1 more source
Environmental Filtering Weakens with Trophic Level in Urban Coastal Ecosystems. [PDF]
Xu W +8 more
europepmc +1 more source

