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Understanding and predicting the consequences of warming for complex ecosystems and indeed individual species remains a major ecological challenge. Here, we investigated the effect of increased seawater temperatures on the metabolic and consumption rates of five distinct marine species. The experimental species reflected different trophic positions within a typical benthic East Atlantic food web, and included a herbivorous gastropod, a scavenging decapod, a predatory echinoderm, a decapod and a benthic-feeding fish. We examined the metabolism-body mass and consumption-body mass scaling for each species, and assessed changes in their consumption efficiencies. Our results indicate that body mass and temperature effects on metabolism were inconsistent across species and that some species were unable to meet metabolic demand at higher temperatures, thus highlighting the vulnerability of individual species to warming. While body size explains a large proportion of the variation in species' physiological responses to warming, it is clear that idiosyncratic species responses, irrespective of body size, complicate predictions of population and ecosystem level response to future scenarios of climate change.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2012.0244 | DOI Listing |
Genome Biol Evol
August 2025
Bird Collection Gantz Family Collections Center, The Field Museum, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Biodiversity has experienced tremendous shifts in community, species, and genetic diversity during the Anthropocene. Understanding temporal diversity shifts is especially critical in biodiversity hotspots, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
August 2025
Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis CA 95616.
Identifying the factors determining the repeatability of adaptation is a long-standing problem in evolutionary biology. Addressing this problem requires both comparative analysis and an understanding of how genetic variation within species responds to natural selection. Latitudinal clines are a classic system for studying adaptation in many species, including Drosophila.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvolution
August 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, Ohio Center for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, Ohio University, Athens, OH, 45701, USA.
Color polymorphism, the occurrence of multiple discrete color morphs with co-adapted sets of traits within the same population, may provide the raw materials for rapid species formation. It has been hypothesized that fixation of a single morph can result in character release, whereby the monomorphic form evolves without the constraint of accommodating multiple adaptive peaks. However, rates of evolution between populations fixed for different morphs likely depend on the specific adaptive zones occupied by each morph.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
September 2025
School of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois, USA.
Bumble bee (Bombus Latreille) populations of certain species have declined precipitously in North America over several decades. Hypotheses for declines include exposure to the pathogen Nosema bombi and neonicotinoid pesticides. Importantly, populations of some bumble bee species remain stable despite their presumed exposure to these same stressors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
July 2025
Negaunee Institute for Plant Conservation Science and Action, Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, Illinois, USA.
Plant species composition and diversity in many terrestrial ecosystems depend on frequent disturbances. Management of these historically disturbance-dependent habitats often requires replicating past disturbance regimes or implementing management approaches that mimic their ecological effects. For example, efforts to manage North American tallgrass prairie frequently utilize prescribed fire to maintain these historically fire-dependent grasslands.
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