Publications by authors named "Anieke Van Leeuwen"

Article Synopsis
  • Shallow coastal and estuarine habitats are crucial for fish species, providing areas for spawning, nursery, and feeding, but these habitats are threatened by human activities that degrade their quality and availability.
  • Different fish species utilize these habitats at various life stages, leading to their classification into functional guilds, which experience the impacts of habitat changes differently.
  • Using size-structured population models, the study examines how reduced food productivity in estuaries affects two guilds: estuarine residents and marine estuarine-dependent species, finding that while overall fish biomass declines, juvenile populations of the latter can increase under certain conditions due to shifts in resource competition and availability.
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Climate change may exacerbate the impact of invasive parasites from warmer climates through pre-existing temperature adaptations. We investigated temperature impacts on two closely related marine parasitic copepod species that share the blue mussel () as host: has invaded the system from a warmer climate <20 years ago, whereas its established congener has had >90 years to adapt. In laboratory experiments with temperatures 10-26°C, covering current and future temperatures as well as heat waves, the development of both life cycle stages of both species accelerated with increasing temperature.

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Article Synopsis
  • Landscapes of fear influence ecosystem dynamics by causing prey to change their behaviors and characteristics to avoid predation, which indirectly impacts other species and can lead to significant ecological effects like trophic cascades.
  • Researchers are working to understand how these dynamics also affect interactions between parasites and their hosts, particularly in terms of how predation risk alters behaviors like parasite avoidance and host tolerance to infections.
  • The study outlines a conceptual framework for these interactions, identifies gaps in current knowledge regarding the links between individual behaviors and broader population dynamics, and suggests future research directions to fill these gaps.
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Climate warming is affecting the suitability and utilization of coastal habitats by marine fishes around the world. Phenological changes are an important indicator of population responses to climate-induced changes but remain difficult to detect in marine fish populations. The design of large-scale monitoring surveys does not allow fine-grained temporal inference of population responses, while the responses of ecologically and economically important species groups such as small pelagic fish are particularly sensitive to temporal resolution.

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Ocean warming and acidification, decreases in dissolved oxygen concentrations, and changes in primary production are causing an unprecedented global redistribution of marine life. The identification of underlying ecological processes underpinning marine species turnover, particularly the prevalence of increases of warm-water species or declines of cold-water species, has been recently debated in the context of ocean warming. Here, we track changes in the mean thermal affinity of marine communities across European seas by calculating the Community Temperature Index for 65 biodiversity time series collected over four decades and containing 1,817 species from different communities (zooplankton, coastal benthos, pelagic and demersal invertebrates and fish).

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Variation in life history traits in animals and plants can often be structured along major axes of life history strategies. The position of a species along these axes can inform on their sensitivity to environmental change. For example, species with slow life histories are found to be less sensitive in their long-term population responses to environmental change than species with fast life histories.

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Bats host virulent zoonotic viruses without experiencing disease. A mechanistic understanding of the impact of bats' virus hosting capacities, including uniquely constitutive immune pathways, on cellular-scale viral dynamics is needed to elucidate zoonotic emergence. We carried out virus infectivity assays on bat cell lines expressing induced and constitutive immune phenotypes, then developed a theoretical model of our system, which we fit to empirical data.

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Over a billion people on earth are infected with helminth parasites and show remarkable variation in parasite burden and chronicity. These parasite distributions are captured well by classic statistics, such as the negative binomial distribution. But the within-host processes underlying this variation are not well understood.

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Background: Mass migrations are among the most striking examples of animal movement in the natural world. Such migrations are major drivers of ecosystem processes and strongly influence the survival and fecundity of individuals. For migratory animals, a formidable challenge is to find their way over long distances and through complex, dynamic environments.

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Experimental and theoretical studies show that mortality imposed on a population can counter-intuitively increase the density of a specific life-history stage or total population density. Understanding positive population-level effects of mortality is advancing, illuminating implications for population, community, and applied ecology. Reconciling theory and data, we found that the mathematical models used to study mortality effects vary in the effects predicted and mechanisms proposed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Many ecological systems can have alternative stable states (ASS), meaning communities can develop differently based on their starting conditions even with the same environment.
  • The study introduces a new mechanism for ASS in competitive systems, focusing on Baltic Sea sprat and herring populations, where cohort-driven cycles lead to priority effects.
  • The authors suggest that conditions for ASS, such as competing populations with cohort cycles and size variation at maturation, are likely common in various ecological systems.
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Catastrophic collapses of top predators have revealed trophic cascades and community structuring by top-down control. When populations fail to recover after a collapse, this may indicate alternative stable states in the system. Overfishing has caused several of the most compelling cases of these dynamics, and in particular Atlantic cod stocks exemplify such lack of recovery.

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Patterns of coexistence among competing species exhibiting size- and food-dependent growth remain largely unexplored. Here we studied mechanisms behind coexistence and shifts in competitive dominance in a size-structured fish guild, representing sprat and herring stocks in the Baltic Sea, using a physiologically structured model of competing populations. The influence of degree of resource overlap and the possibility of undergoing ontogenetic diet shifts were studied as functions of zooplankton and zoobenthos productivity.

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