The problem of linking fine-scale processes to broad-scale patterns remains a central challenge of ecology. As rates of abiotic change intensify, there is a critical need to understand how individual responses aggregate to generate compensatory dynamics that stabilize community processes. Notably, while local and global resource enhancement (e.g., nutrient and CO2 release) can reverse dominance relationship between key species (e.g., shifts from naturally kelp-dominated to turf-dominated systems), herbivores can counter these shifts by consuming the additional productivity of competing species (e.g., turfs). Here, we test whether consumer plasticity in energy intake to maintain growth in varying environments can underpin changes in consumpt...
International audienceUnderstanding ecosystem stability is one of the greatest challenges of ecology...
Recent research has generally shown that a small change in the number of species in a food web can h...
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. The capacity of natural systems to absorb disturbances without undergoing major...
The intensity at which organisms interact is affected by abiotic conditions. Ocean warming and acidi...
The development of frameworks that account for community stability and its loss to environmental dis...
Consumer-resource interactions play an important role in determining the structure and function of e...
Certain environmental conditions facilitate the control of primary producers by herbivores. Environm...
Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure, but the probability of transition...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd/CNRS. Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure...
Herbivores can consume more nutrient rich algae than nutrient poor algae, and such foraging behaviou...
Human modification of the abiotic environment can cause profound change to biological communities, y...
Ecologically dominant species often define ecosystem states, but as human disturbances intensify, th...
The role of positive interactions in structuring plant and animal communities is increasingly recogn...
Increasing oceanic uptake of CO2 is predicted to drive ecological change as both a resource (i.e. CO...
The role of positive interactions in structuring plant and animal communities is increasingly recogn...
International audienceUnderstanding ecosystem stability is one of the greatest challenges of ecology...
Recent research has generally shown that a small change in the number of species in a food web can h...
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. The capacity of natural systems to absorb disturbances without undergoing major...
The intensity at which organisms interact is affected by abiotic conditions. Ocean warming and acidi...
The development of frameworks that account for community stability and its loss to environmental dis...
Consumer-resource interactions play an important role in determining the structure and function of e...
Certain environmental conditions facilitate the control of primary producers by herbivores. Environm...
Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure, but the probability of transition...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd/CNRS. Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure...
Herbivores can consume more nutrient rich algae than nutrient poor algae, and such foraging behaviou...
Human modification of the abiotic environment can cause profound change to biological communities, y...
Ecologically dominant species often define ecosystem states, but as human disturbances intensify, th...
The role of positive interactions in structuring plant and animal communities is increasingly recogn...
Increasing oceanic uptake of CO2 is predicted to drive ecological change as both a resource (i.e. CO...
The role of positive interactions in structuring plant and animal communities is increasingly recogn...
International audienceUnderstanding ecosystem stability is one of the greatest challenges of ecology...
Recent research has generally shown that a small change in the number of species in a food web can h...
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. The capacity of natural systems to absorb disturbances without undergoing major...