Includes bibliographical references (pages 55-60)Natural communities are expected to undergo shifts in composition and species interactions as a result of environmental change, such as changes to regional temperature regimes and increased nutrient input into ecosystems. Predicting how communities will respond is complicated by three factors: non-additive effects of multiple stressors, differences in response among trophic levels, and trait evolution leading to adaptation. This study addressed all three of these factors using a natural microcosm community. The purple pitcher plant, Sarracenia purpurea, is a carnivorous plant that retains rainwater inside of its cup-shaped leaves. Within this water, an inquiline community of microbes and inve...
Anthropogenic change has altered the ecological landscape upon which modern plant communities have a...
Studies of evolutionary responses to novel environments typically consider single species or perhaps...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Natural systems provide beneficial goods and services ...
It is widely theorized that population and community processes such as competition, predation, and d...
Evolution can occur on ecological time-scales, affecting community and ecosystem processes. However,...
Global changes such as increased frequency of fire, drought, and nitrogen deposition, perturb microo...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, May, 2020Cataloged fro...
Anthropogenic environmental changes, such as increased nitrogen (N) deposition, changes in precipita...
Predicting the effect of climate change on biodiversity is a multifactorial problem that is complica...
Environmental change can alter species’ abundances within communities consistently; for example, inc...
Global changes such as increased drought and atmospheric nitrogen deposition perturb both the microb...
Investigations into the distribution and ecosystem functions of fruiting amoebae revealed that local...
Communities are structured by many factors including abiotic factors such as resource availability, ...
Understanding the processes that determine the diversity and dynamics of plant communities is a long...
This dissertation presents four microbial microcosm-based experimental studies addressing questions ...
Anthropogenic change has altered the ecological landscape upon which modern plant communities have a...
Studies of evolutionary responses to novel environments typically consider single species or perhaps...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Natural systems provide beneficial goods and services ...
It is widely theorized that population and community processes such as competition, predation, and d...
Evolution can occur on ecological time-scales, affecting community and ecosystem processes. However,...
Global changes such as increased frequency of fire, drought, and nitrogen deposition, perturb microo...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, May, 2020Cataloged fro...
Anthropogenic environmental changes, such as increased nitrogen (N) deposition, changes in precipita...
Predicting the effect of climate change on biodiversity is a multifactorial problem that is complica...
Environmental change can alter species’ abundances within communities consistently; for example, inc...
Global changes such as increased drought and atmospheric nitrogen deposition perturb both the microb...
Investigations into the distribution and ecosystem functions of fruiting amoebae revealed that local...
Communities are structured by many factors including abiotic factors such as resource availability, ...
Understanding the processes that determine the diversity and dynamics of plant communities is a long...
This dissertation presents four microbial microcosm-based experimental studies addressing questions ...
Anthropogenic change has altered the ecological landscape upon which modern plant communities have a...
Studies of evolutionary responses to novel environments typically consider single species or perhaps...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Natural systems provide beneficial goods and services ...