A central goal in ecology is to predict what governs a species’ ability to establish in a new environment. One mechanism driving establishment success is individual species’ traits, but the role of trait combinations among interacting species across different trophic levels is less clear. Deliberate or accidental species additions to existing communities provide opportunities to study larger scale patterns of establishment success. Biological control introductions are especially valuable because they contain data on both the successfully established and unestablished species. Here, we used a recent dataset of importation biological control introductions to explore how life-history traits of 132 parasitoid species and their herbivorous hosts...
Antagonistic relationships between parasitoids and their insect hosts involve multiple traits and ar...
Ecological communities are composed of many species, forming complex networks of interactions. Curre...
Most animals do not feed on all the resources available to them, but the mechanisms behind the evolu...
A central goal in ecology is to predict what governs a species' ability to establish in a new enviro...
Species and clades are characterized by their unique combinations, or suites, of different life hist...
Parasitoid wasps have long been considered as model organisms for examining optimal resource allocat...
16 pagesInternational audienceLife‐history traits within ecological communities can be influenced by...
The use of alternative hosts imposes divergent selection pressures on parasitoid populations. In res...
Outcomes of competition may depend both on subtle differences in traits relevant to fitness and on h...
Tritrophic interactions among plants, herbivorous insects and their parasitoids have been well studi...
The invasion of a novel host species can create a mismatch in host choice and offspring survival (pe...
Co-evolutionary theory underpins our understanding of interactions in nature involving plant-herbivo...
Antagonistic relationships between parasitoids and their insect hosts involve multiple traits and ar...
Ecological communities are composed of many species, forming complex networks of interactions. Curre...
Most animals do not feed on all the resources available to them, but the mechanisms behind the evolu...
A central goal in ecology is to predict what governs a species' ability to establish in a new enviro...
Species and clades are characterized by their unique combinations, or suites, of different life hist...
Parasitoid wasps have long been considered as model organisms for examining optimal resource allocat...
16 pagesInternational audienceLife‐history traits within ecological communities can be influenced by...
The use of alternative hosts imposes divergent selection pressures on parasitoid populations. In res...
Outcomes of competition may depend both on subtle differences in traits relevant to fitness and on h...
Tritrophic interactions among plants, herbivorous insects and their parasitoids have been well studi...
The invasion of a novel host species can create a mismatch in host choice and offspring survival (pe...
Co-evolutionary theory underpins our understanding of interactions in nature involving plant-herbivo...
Antagonistic relationships between parasitoids and their insect hosts involve multiple traits and ar...
Ecological communities are composed of many species, forming complex networks of interactions. Curre...
Most animals do not feed on all the resources available to them, but the mechanisms behind the evolu...