Mod, Heidi K Scherrer, Daniel Di Cola, Valeria Broennimann, Olivier Blandenier, Quentin Breiner, Frank T Buri, Aline Goudet, Jérôme Guex, Nicolas Lara, Enrique
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Published in
Global change biology
Assessing the degree to which climate explains the spatial distributions of different taxonomic and functional groups is essential for anticipating the effects of climate change on ecosystems. Most effort so far has focused on above-ground organisms, which offer only a partial view on the response of biodiversity to environmental gradients. Here in...
Haesen, Stef; 133385; Lembrechts, Jonas J.; De Frenne, Pieter; Lenoir, Jonathan; Aalto, Juha; Ashcroft, Michael B.; Kopecký, Martin; Luoto, Miska; Maclean, Ilya; Nijs, Ivan;
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Microclimate research gained renewed interest over the last decade and its importance for many ecological processes is increasingly being recognized. Consequently, the call for high-resolution microclimatic temperature grids across broad spatial extents is becoming more pressing to improve ecological models. Here, we provide a new set of open-acces...
Pauperio, Joana Gonzalez, Luis Martin Martinez, Jesus González, Marcos A. Martins, Filipa MS Veríssimo, Joana Puppo, Pamela Pinto, Joana Chaves, Cátia Pinho, Catarina J.
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Background The Trichoptera are an important component of freshwater ecosystems. In the Iberian Peninsula, 380 taxa of caddisflies are known, with nearly 1/3 of the total species being endemic in the region. A reference collection of morphologically identified Trichoptera specimens, representing 142 Iberian taxa, was constructed. The InBIO Barcoding ...
Uricchio, Lawrence H. Bruns, Emily L. Hood, Michael Boots, Mike Antonovics, Janis
Published in
Ecology
Theoretical models suggest that infectious diseases could play a substantial role in determining the spatial extent of host species, but few studies have collected the empirical data required to test this hypothesis. Pathogens that sterilize their hosts or spread through frequency-dependent transmission could have especially strong effects on the l...
Grigoropoulou, Afroditi Hamid, Suhaila Ab Acosta, Raúl Akindele, Emmanuel Olusegun Al-Shami, Salman Altermatt, Florian Amatulli, Giuseppe Angeler, David Arimoro, Francis Aroviita, Jukka
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Motivation Aquatic insects comprise 64% of freshwater animal diversity and are widely used as bioindicators to assess water quality impairment and freshwater ecosystem health, as well as to test ecological hypotheses. Despite their importance, a comprehensive, global database of aquatic insect occurrences for mapping freshwater biodiversity in macr...
Haesen, Stef Lembrechts, Jonas J. De Frenne, Pieter Lenoir, Jonathan Aalto, Juha Ashcroft, Michael B. Kopecký, Martin Luoto, Miska Maclean, Ilya Nijs, Ivan
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Microclimate research gained renewed interest over the last decade and its importance for many ecological processes is increasingly being recognized. Consequently, the call for high-resolution microclimatic temperature grids across broad spatial extents is becoming more pressing to improve ecological models. Here, we provide a new set of open-acces...
Haesen, Stef Lembrechts, Jonas J. De Frenne, Pieter Lenoir, Jonathan Aalto, Juha Ashcroft, Michael B. Kopecký, Martin Luoto, Miska Maclean, Ilya Nijs, Ivan
...
Microclimate research gained renewed interest over the last decade and its importance for many ecological processes is increasingly being recognized. Consequently, the call for high-resolution microclimatic temperature grids across broad spatial extents is becoming more pressing to improve ecological models. Here, we provide a new set of open-acces...
Viana, Duarte S Blanco-Garrido, Francisco Delibes, Miguel Clavero, Miguel
Published in
Ecology
Documenting and understanding long-term biodiversity change is limited by the availability of historical data, particularly from periods preceding major anthropogenic changes associated with the Industrial Revolution. We mined the information of a standardized historical survey developed in 628 localities across Spain between 1574 and 1582 (Relacio...
Kitchel, Zoë Conrad, Hailey Selden, Rebecca Pinsky, Malin
As a consequence of anthropogenic climate change, marine species on continental shelves around the world are rapidly shifting deeper and poleward. However, whether these shifts deeper and poleward will allow species to access more, less, or equivalent amounts of continental shelf area and associated critical habitats remains unclear. By examining t...
Nascimento, Geraldo Câmara, Talita Arnan, Xavier
Published in
Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
Critical thermal limits (CTLs) constrain the performance of organisms, shaping their abundance, current distributions, and future distributions. Consequently, CTLs may also determine the quality of ecosystem services as well as organismal and ecosystem vulnerability to climate change. As some of the most ubiquitous animals in terrestrial ecosystems...