1. Body size determines key ecological and evolutionary processes of organisms. Therefore, organisms undergo extensive shifts in resources, competitors and predators as they grow in body size. While empirical and theoretical evidence show that these size-dependent ontogenetic shifts vastly influence the structure and dynamics of populations, theory on how those ontogenetic shifts affect the structure and dynamics of ecological networks is still virtually absent. 2. Here, we expand the Allometric Trophic Network (ATN) theory in the context of aquatic food webs to incorporate size-structure in the population dynamics of fish species. We do this by modifying a food web generating algorithm, the niche model, to produce food webs whe...
Trophic cascade studies often rely on linear food chains instead of complex food webs and are typica...
Abstract Evidence of contemporary evolution across ecological time scales stimulated research on the...
1. Growth in body size is accompanied by changes in foraging capacity and metabolic costs, which lea...
1. Body size determines key ecological and evolutionary processes of organisms. Therefore, organisms...
Body size determines key ecological and evolutionary processes of organisms. Therefore, organisms un...
Biological organisms can vastly change their ecological functionality due to changes in body size an...
1. Widely observed macro-ecological patterns in log abundance vs. log body mass of organisms can be ...
Aquatic ecosystems support size structured food webs, wherein predator-prey body sizes span orders o...
This thesis sets out a food web framework for size-structured populations. The framework enables an ...
Worldwide, local anthropogenic extinctions have recently been reported to induce trophic cascades, d...
Trophic cascade studies often rely on linear food chains instead of complex food webs and are typica...
We synthesise traditional unstructured food webs, allometric body size scaling, trait-based modellin...
Harvesting has been implicated in destabilizing the abundances of exploited populations. Because sel...
The relationship between body mass (M) and size class abundance (N) depicts patterns of community st...
1. Body size determines rates of respiration and production, energy requirements, mortality rates, p...
Trophic cascade studies often rely on linear food chains instead of complex food webs and are typica...
Abstract Evidence of contemporary evolution across ecological time scales stimulated research on the...
1. Growth in body size is accompanied by changes in foraging capacity and metabolic costs, which lea...
1. Body size determines key ecological and evolutionary processes of organisms. Therefore, organisms...
Body size determines key ecological and evolutionary processes of organisms. Therefore, organisms un...
Biological organisms can vastly change their ecological functionality due to changes in body size an...
1. Widely observed macro-ecological patterns in log abundance vs. log body mass of organisms can be ...
Aquatic ecosystems support size structured food webs, wherein predator-prey body sizes span orders o...
This thesis sets out a food web framework for size-structured populations. The framework enables an ...
Worldwide, local anthropogenic extinctions have recently been reported to induce trophic cascades, d...
Trophic cascade studies often rely on linear food chains instead of complex food webs and are typica...
We synthesise traditional unstructured food webs, allometric body size scaling, trait-based modellin...
Harvesting has been implicated in destabilizing the abundances of exploited populations. Because sel...
The relationship between body mass (M) and size class abundance (N) depicts patterns of community st...
1. Body size determines rates of respiration and production, energy requirements, mortality rates, p...
Trophic cascade studies often rely on linear food chains instead of complex food webs and are typica...
Abstract Evidence of contemporary evolution across ecological time scales stimulated research on the...
1. Growth in body size is accompanied by changes in foraging capacity and metabolic costs, which lea...