Intraspecific phenotypic variation is a significant component of biodiversity. Body size, for example, is variable and critical for structuring communities. We need to understand how homogenous and variably-sized populations differ in their ecological responses or effects if we are to have a robust understanding of communities. We manipulated body size variation in consumer (tadpole) populations in mesocosms (both with and without predators), keeping mean size and density of these consumers constant. Size-variable consumer populations exhibited stronger antipredator responses (reduced activity), which had a cascading effect of increasing the biomass of the consumer’s resources. Predators foraged less when consumers were variable in size, an...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...
Size variability within a cohort can have profound effects on community ecology and evolution. While...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...
Intraspecific phenotypic variation is a significant component of biodiversity. Body size, for exampl...
Intraspecific phenotypic variation is a significant component of biodiversity. Body size, for exampl...
Efforts to characterize food webs have generated two influential approaches that reduce the complexi...
Efforts to characterize food webs have generated two influential approaches that reduce the complexi...
Efforts to characterize food webs have generated two influential approaches that reduce the complexi...
Body size is a fundamental property of an organism. Consistent body size-related patterns, relevant ...
1. Non-consumptive effects (NCES) frequently lead to non-independent effects of multiple predators. ...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...
Travis Ingram is with University of British Columbia; William E. Stutz is with UT Austin; Daniel I. ...
1. Non-consumptive effects (NCES) frequently lead to non-independent effects of multiple predators. ...
1. Non-consumptive effects (NCES) frequently lead to non-independent effects of multiple predators. ...
Travis Ingram is with University of British Columbia; William E. Stutz is with UT Austin; Daniel I. ...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...
Size variability within a cohort can have profound effects on community ecology and evolution. While...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...
Intraspecific phenotypic variation is a significant component of biodiversity. Body size, for exampl...
Intraspecific phenotypic variation is a significant component of biodiversity. Body size, for exampl...
Efforts to characterize food webs have generated two influential approaches that reduce the complexi...
Efforts to characterize food webs have generated two influential approaches that reduce the complexi...
Efforts to characterize food webs have generated two influential approaches that reduce the complexi...
Body size is a fundamental property of an organism. Consistent body size-related patterns, relevant ...
1. Non-consumptive effects (NCES) frequently lead to non-independent effects of multiple predators. ...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...
Travis Ingram is with University of British Columbia; William E. Stutz is with UT Austin; Daniel I. ...
1. Non-consumptive effects (NCES) frequently lead to non-independent effects of multiple predators. ...
1. Non-consumptive effects (NCES) frequently lead to non-independent effects of multiple predators. ...
Travis Ingram is with University of British Columbia; William E. Stutz is with UT Austin; Daniel I. ...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...
Size variability within a cohort can have profound effects on community ecology and evolution. While...
Theoretical ecologists have historically treated all members of a species as functionally equivalent...