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Strong environmental changes such as climate change or overfishing threaten biodiversity and important ecosystem functions, and it is unclear whether and at what speed natural communities can adapt. The shape of interspecific trade-offs between functional traits is key to understanding community composition and response as it determines which strategies or trait combinations are feasible in a community. The trade-off shape describes the curvature of the boundary of the feasible trait space, which is determined by physiological, energetic or other constraints. Under environmental change, communities adapt toward species with strategies matching the new conditions, but we lack insights into how the trade-off shape affects the mechanism and speed of community adaptation and maintenance of ecosystem functions. We used a diamond-shaped food web model to test how a prey community adapts to altered environmental conditions (altered predation pressure) depending on the shape of an interspecific growth-defense trade-off and how this influences diversity and ecosystem functions (i.e., community-level biomasses). We considered different types (chronic and periodic) and speeds of environmental change. Our study shows that the mechanism and speed of community adaptation depend crucially on the trade-off shape. For convex trade-offs, community adaptation arose through altered frequencies of coexisting resident species with very different, extreme trait combinations. Here, adaptation proceeded relatively quickly and maintained ecosystem functions even at relatively high speeds of environmental change. This held given the existence of stabilizing mechanisms that promoted the coexistence of these extreme species. In contrast, concave trade-offs led to a different adaptation mechanism: species turnover with progressive immigration of new species (from one extreme to the other via intermediate trait combinations) which took longer. Communities facing a concave trade-off varied more in species composition over time or space, implying a higher temporal or spatial -diversity, but were more sensitive to rapid environmental changes than those facing a convex trade-off. Our results reveal that knowing the trade-off shape can be important for understanding and predicting community adaptation, functional diversity, and maintenance of ecosystem function under future environmental change.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.70156 | DOI Listing |
J Pediatr Urol
August 2025
School of Medicine and Pharmacy, University of Poitiers, 6 Rue de la Milétrie, TSA 51115, 86073, Poitiers Cedex, France; Clinical Investigation Center, INSERM, 2 Rue de la Milétrie 1402, 86021, Poitiers, France; University of Poitiers, CNRS UMR7267, Ecologie & Biologie des Interactions, 86000, Poi
Purpose: The high frequency of urinary disorders and their complications among school-aged children is common but few studies have investigated their predictors such as poor urinary hygiene habits, inappropriate use of school toilets, and deteriorated school toilets conditions. The question is whether individual factors (behaviors) conditioned by environmental factors (toilet conditions) play a role in functional urinary disorders.
Materials And Methods: We performed an electronic cross-sectional observational study from October 1, 2023, to March 31, 2024, in the department of Vienne (France), among children's parents.
Arch Dis Child
September 2025
Department of General Pediatrics, Erasmus MC Sophia, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Objective: To externally validate the Paediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) rule for identifying febrile infants aged <60 days at low risk of serious bacterial infections (SBIs) and assess the utility of the rule with C reactive protein (CRP) instead of procalcitonin (PCT).
Methods: Secondary analysis of data from the Management and Outcomes of Fever in Children in Europe (MOFICHE) study (12 paediatric emergency departments in eight European countries, January 2017 to April 2018) and a Swedish study (four paediatric emergency departments, January 2014 to December 2020). Previously healthy febrile infants aged ≤60 days were included.
BMJ Open
September 2025
Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, Erasmus School of Health Policy and Management, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Introduction: Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are a leading cause of global mortality, disproportionately affecting low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Physical inactivity, a key contributor to NCDs, is prevalent worldwide despite evidence supporting the health benefits of physical activity (PA). Cities, while often associated with barriers to PA, also present unique opportunities to enhance PA through systemic, context-sensitive interventions or so-called actions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol Part D Genomics Proteomics
September 2025
Chinese PLA Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China. Electronic address:
The transmission of mosquito-borne diseases is intrinsically linked to mosquito blood-feeding behavior, yet the metabolic adaptations of the midgut microbiota in response to blood meals remain poorly understood. This study aimed to characterize the structural and functional changes in the midgut microbiota of Aedes albopictus following blood feeding and to elucidate their potential physiological implications. In this study, we employed 16S rRNA gene amplification coupled with PacBio Sequel II sequencing to characterize shifts in the midgut microbiota of Aedes albopictus before and after blood feeding on mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hazard Mater
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Ecological Safety and Sustainable Development in Arid Lands, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China; Lanzhou Eco-Agriculture Experimental Research Station, Lanzhou 730000, China; Key Laboratory of Stress Physio
Microplastics are pervasive soil pollutants, yet their role in driving microbial risk in medicinal plant rhizospheres remains poorly understood. Using polyethylene microplastics (PE-MPs) as a model, this study investigated the dose-dependent effects of PE-MPs (0-1000 mg/kg) on the dynamics of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), biocide/metal resistance genes (BMRGs), virulence factor genes (VFGs), mobile genetic elements (MGEs), and human bacterial pathogens (HBPs) in the rhizosphere of Angelica sinensis. Results showed that PE-MPs exposure increased the abundance of these genes and pathogens while simplifying the host microbial community structure.
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