Self-organized, regular spatial patterns emerging from local interactions among individuals enhance the ability of ecosystems to respond to environmental disturbances. Mussels self-organize to form large, regularly patterned biogenic structures that modify the biotic and abiotic environment and provide numerous ecosystem functions and services. We used two mussel species that form monospecific and mixed beds to investigate how species-specific behavior affects self-organization and resistance to wave stress. Perna perna has strong attachment but low motility, while Mytilus galloprovincialis shows the reverse. At low density, the less motile P. perna has limited spatial self-organization compared with M. galloprovincialis, while when coexist...
Cooperation, ubiquitous in nature, is difficult to explain from an evolutionary perspective. Many mo...
In the past decade, theoretical ecologists have emphasized that local interactions between predator...
Organisms inhabit environments that have many dimensions, each of which can vary temporally and spat...
Self-organized, regular spatial patterns emerging from local interactions among individuals enhance ...
Mussels self-organize to form large regularly-patterned biogenic structures that modify the biotic a...
Self-organized spatial patterns occur in many terrestrial, aquatic, and marine ecosystems. Theoretic...
Self-organized complexity at multiple spatial scales is a distinctive characteristic of biological s...
Theoretical models predict that spatial self-organization can have important, unexpected implication...
Spatial self-organization is the main theoretical explanation for the global occurrence of regular o...
Organisms inhabit environments that have many dimensions, each of which can vary temporally and spat...
Spatial self-organization is the main theoretical explanation for the global occurrence of regular o...
In the past decade, theoretical ecologists have emphasized that local interactions between predators...
In the past decade, theoretical ecologists have emphasized that local interactions between predators...
Cooperation, ubiquitous in nature, is difficult to explain from an evolutionary perspective. Many mo...
Cooperation, ubiquitous in nature, is difficult to explain from an evolutionary perspective. Many mo...
In the past decade, theoretical ecologists have emphasized that local interactions between predator...
Organisms inhabit environments that have many dimensions, each of which can vary temporally and spat...
Self-organized, regular spatial patterns emerging from local interactions among individuals enhance ...
Mussels self-organize to form large regularly-patterned biogenic structures that modify the biotic a...
Self-organized spatial patterns occur in many terrestrial, aquatic, and marine ecosystems. Theoretic...
Self-organized complexity at multiple spatial scales is a distinctive characteristic of biological s...
Theoretical models predict that spatial self-organization can have important, unexpected implication...
Spatial self-organization is the main theoretical explanation for the global occurrence of regular o...
Organisms inhabit environments that have many dimensions, each of which can vary temporally and spat...
Spatial self-organization is the main theoretical explanation for the global occurrence of regular o...
In the past decade, theoretical ecologists have emphasized that local interactions between predators...
In the past decade, theoretical ecologists have emphasized that local interactions between predators...
Cooperation, ubiquitous in nature, is difficult to explain from an evolutionary perspective. Many mo...
Cooperation, ubiquitous in nature, is difficult to explain from an evolutionary perspective. Many mo...
In the past decade, theoretical ecologists have emphasized that local interactions between predator...
Organisms inhabit environments that have many dimensions, each of which can vary temporally and spat...