Custer, Gordon F Bresciani, Luana Dini-Andreote, Francisco
Published in
Trends in microbiology
Community coalescence is defined as the mixing of intact ecological communities. From river confluences to fecal microbiota transplantation, community coalescence constitutes a common ecological occurrence affecting natural and engineered microbial systems. In this opinion article, we propose an integrative framework for microbial community coalesc...
Medeiros, Lucas P Saavedra, Serguei
Published in
Ecology
Understanding how communities respond to perturbations requires us to consider not only changes in the abundance of individual species but also correlated changes that can emerge through interspecific effects. However, our knowledge of this phenomenon is mostly constrained to situations where interspecific effects are fixed. Here, we introduce a fr...
Hossie, Thomas J. Murray, Dennis L.
Published in
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Heiland, Lukas Kunstler, Georges Šebeň, Vladimír Hülsmann, Lisa
Published in
Ecology and evolution
In forest communities, light competition is a key process for community assembly. Species' differences in seedling and sapling tolerance to shade cast by overstory trees is thought to determine species composition at late-successional stages. Most forests are distant from these late-successional equilibria, impeding a formal evaluation of their pot...
Martin, Paul R Ghalambor, Cameron K
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractClosely related, ecologically similar species often segregate their distributions along environmental gradients of time, space, and resources, but previous research suggests diverse underlying causes. Here, we review reciprocal removal studies in nature that experimentally test the role of interactions among species in determining their tur...
Carlson, Christopher Frederickson, Megan E
Published in
Molecular ecology
Mutualisms are often framed as 'delicately balanced antagonisms' (Bronstein, 1994), with the net fitness benefits to both partners potentially masking underlying conflicts of interest. How commonly symbionts evolve to 'cheat' their hosts and hosts evolve to 'sanction' or 'control' uncooperative symbionts is the subject of debate, especially in legu...
Sandacz, Dan Vitt, Pati Knight, Tiffany M. CaraDonna, Paul Havens, Kayri
Published in
Frontiers in Conservation Science
Ecological communities are maintained through species interactions, and the resilience of species interactions is critical to the persistence of natural communities. Keystone species play outsized roles in maintaining species interaction networks, and within plant-pollinator communities are high priorities for conservation. The loss of a keystone p...
Norberg, Anna Susi, Hanna Sallinen, Suvi Baran, Pezhman Clark, Nicholas J Laine, Anna-Liisa
Published in
Current biology : CB
Viruses are a vastly underestimated component of biodiversity that occur as diverse communities across hierarchical scales from the landscape level to individual hosts. The integration of community ecology with disease biology is a powerful, novel approach that can yield unprecedented insights into the abiotic and biotic drivers of pathogen communi...
Bello, Carolina Schleuning, Matthias Graham, Catherine H
Published in
Trends in ecology & evolution
Quantifying the vulnerability of ecosystems to global change requires a better understanding of how trophic ecosystem functions emerge. So far, trophic ecosystem functions have been studied from the perspective of either functional diversity or network ecology. To integrate these two perspectives, we propose the interaction functional space (IFS) a...
MacAlpine, Jessie Robbins, Nicole Cowen, Leah E
Published in
Molecular ecology
Microbial communities of the human microbiota exhibit diverse effects on human health and disease. Microbial homeostasis is important for normal physiological functions and changes to the microbiota are associated with many human diseases including diabetes, cancer, and colitis. In addition, there are many microorganisms that are either commensal o...