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16 Dec 2024
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From fear to food: predation risk shapes deer behaviour, their resources and forest vegetation

A multidimensional exploration of predator-prey dynamics

Recommended by ORCID_LOGO based on reviews by Thomas Guillemaud and 2 anonymous reviewers

In the preprint "From Fear to Food: Predation Risk Shapes Deer Behaviour, Their Resources, and Forest Vegetation", Martin et al. provide a comprehensive examination of the intricate interplay between predation risk, deer behavior, and forest ecosystems. The study offers notable insights into the "ecology of fear," as it takes advantage of an extensive dataset that reflects decades of dedicated research effort. The authors’ approach combines behavioral ecology, plant community analysis, and stable isotope studies, making this work a significant contribution to our understanding of complex ecological phenomena.

One of the most striking aspects of this study is the scale and richness of the dataset. The authors used data collected over multiple decades, spanning various experimental contexts, including islands with and without predators, hunting, and culling histories. These datasets are invaluable, as such long-term, geographically diverse studies are rare. The inclusion of both behavioral observations (e.g., flight initiation distances) and ecological outcomes (e.g., vegetation recovery) underscores the effort to provide a holistic understanding of these ecological interactions.

The results are not only scientifically robust but also conceptually significant. They challenge simplistic assumptions about predator-prey relationships by illustrating how both the presence and absence of predation risk can have lasting effects on ecosystems. For example, the findings that culling restores vegetation but creates behavioral shifts in deer populations emphasize the complexity of ecological restoration efforts. These results invite further exploration into how behavioral adaptations to predation risk may alter long-term ecosystem trajectories.

In conclusion, Martin et al.'s preprint represents a significant advancement in understanding predator-prey interactions and their cascading effects on ecosystems. The study’s comprehensive dataset and integrative approach provide a model for future research in ecological and behavioral sciences. It is a commendable contribution to the field, with implications for both theoretical ecology and practical conservation.

References

Jean-Louis Martin, Simon Chamaillé-Jammes, Anne Salomon, Devana Veronica Gomez Pourroy, Mathilde Schlaeflin, Soizic Le Saout, Annick Lucas, Ilham Bentaleb, Simon Chollet, Jake Pattison, Soline Martin-Blangy , Anthony J. Gaston (2024) From fear to food: predation risk shapes deer behaviour, their resources and forest vegetation . HAL, ver.6 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology https://hal.science/hal-04381108v5

From fear to food: predation risk shapes deer behaviour, their resources and forest vegetation Jean-Louis Martin, Simon Chamaillé-Jammes, Anne Salomon, Devana Veronica Gomez Pourroy, Mathilde Schlaeflin, Soizic Le Saout, Annick Lucas, Ilham Bentaleb, Simon Chollet, Jake Pattison, Soline Martin-Blangy , Anthony J. Gaston<p>The “ecology of fear” posits that predation risk shapes the behaviour of large herbivores, their foraging patterns, their habitat selection and their consequent effect on forest ecology. To test some of these predictions we used the extensive e...Behaviour & Ethology, Biodiversity, Community ecology, Ecosystem functioning, Food webs, Foraging, Habitat selection, Herbivory, Population ecologyGloriana Chaverri2024-01-10 14:07:13 View
10 Oct 2024
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Large-scale spatio-temporal variation in vital rates and population dynamics of an alpine bird

Do look up: building a comprehensive view of population dynamics from small scale observation through citizen science

Recommended by based on reviews by Todd Arnold and 1 anonymous reviewer

Population ecologists are in the business of decrypting the drivers of variation in the abundance of organisms across space and time (Begon et al. 1986). Comprehensive studies of wild vertebrate populations which provide the necessary information on variations in vital rates in relation to environmental conditions to construct informative models of large-scale population dynamics are rare, ostensibly because of the huge effort required to monitor individuals across ecological contexts and over generations. In this current aim, Nater et al. (2024) are leading the way forward by combining distance sampling data collected through a large-scale citizen science (Fraisl et al. 2022) programme in Norway with state-of-the-art modelling approaches to build a comprehensive overview of the population dynamics of willow ptarmigan. Their work enhances our fundamental understanding of this system and provides evidence-based tools to improve its management (Williams et al. 2002). Even better, they are working for the common good, by providing an open-source workflow that should enable ecologists and managers together to predict what will happen to their favourite model organism when the planet throws its next curve ball. In the case of the ptarmigan, for example, it seems that the impact of climate change on their population dynamics will differ across the species’ distributional range, with a slower pace of life (sensu Stearns 1983) at higher latitudes and altitudes. 

On a personal note, I have often mused whether citizen science, with its inherent limits and biases, was just another sticking plaster over the ever-deeper cuts in the research budgets to finance long-term ecological research. Here, Nater et al. are doing well to convince me that we would be foolish to ignore such opportunities, particularly when citizens are engaged, motivated, with an inherent capacity for the necessary discipline to employ common protocols in a standardised fashion. A key challenge for us professional ecologists is to inculcate the next generation of citizens with a sense of their opportunity to contribute to a better understanding of the natural world.

References

Begon, Michael, John L Harper, and Colin R Townsend. 1986. Ecology: individuals, populations and communities. Blackwell Science.

Fraisl, Dilek, Gerid Hager, Baptiste Bedessem, Margaret Gold, Pen-Yuan Hsing, Finn Danielsen, Colleen B Hitchcock, et al. 2022. Citizen Science in Environmental and Ecological Sciences. Nature Reviews Methods Primers 2 (1): 64. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43586-022-00144-4

Chloé R. Nater, Francesco Frassinelli, James A. Martin, Erlend B. Nilsen (2024) Large-scale spatio-temporal variation in vital rates and population dynamics of an alpine bird. EcoEvoRxiv, ver.4 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology https://doi.org/10.32942/X2VP6J

Stearns, S.C. 1983. The influence of size and phylogeny of covariation among life-history traits in the mammals. Oikos, 41, 173–187. https://doi.org/10.2307/3544261

Williams, Byron K, James D Nichols, and Michael J Conroy. 2002. Analysis and Management of Animal Populations. Academic Press.

Large-scale spatio-temporal variation in vital rates and population dynamics of an alpine birdChloé R. Nater, Francesco Frassinelli, James A. Martin, Erlend B. Nilsen<p>Quantifying temporal and spatial variation in animal population size and demography is a central theme in ecological research and important for directing management and policy. However, this requires field sampling at large spatial extents and ...Biodiversity, Biogeography, Conservation biology, Demography, Euring Conference, Landscape ecology, Life history, Population ecology, Spatial ecology, Metacommunities & Metapopulations, Statistical ecology, Terrestrial ecologyAidan Jonathan Mark Hewison2024-02-02 08:54:06 View
16 Aug 2024
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The distribution of distances to the edge of species coexistence

How environmental perturbations affect coexistence

Recommended by based on reviews by Thomas Guillemaud, Oscar Godoy, Pablo Lechon and 1 anonymous reviewer

 Understanding the effects of environmental perturbations on coexistence is a key challenge in ecology, and models have played an important role in structuring our ideas and generating predictions, leading to quantitative hypotheses. In such models, environmental perturbations are often captured by changes in parameter values, such as the intrinsic growth rates of species (1–3). The question then becomes how much one can change these parameters without breaking coexistence and thus losing species (4). 
 
An intuitively appealing approach to address this question is to calculate a model’s feasibility domain (5–7). Loosely defined, it is the fraction of parameter settings leading to the coexistence of all species. Mathematically speaking, it is a high-dimensional triangle, of which one can calculate the size, just as for plain two-dimensional triangles. Parameter settings outside of this triangle break coexistence. Thus, it seems logical that greater feasibility domains would make for more robust ecosystems. However, careful interpretation is key: a greater feasibility domain merely implies that across many attempts at running a model with different random parameter settings, coexistence will be more frequent. It does not necessarily inform us how much one can perturb the parameters of a community with a predefined parameter setting. To get this information, we also need to know the shape of the triangle (7): perturbations more easily knock the parameter setting out of a flat triangle than out of an equilateral triangle. 
 
Desaillais et al. (8) develop a new theory that sheds light on what drives the shape of the feasibility domain. Specifically, they present the probability distribution that tells how close to the edge of the feasibility domain the parameter settings in that domain tend to be. For example, all points in a very flat triangle are close to its edge, while in an equilateral triangle, most points are safely stowed inside. The results show how, in a Lotka-Volterra model, the matrix of species interactions fully defines this distribution, which makes the technique empirically applicable in so far as one can estimate these interactions. The analysis then continues to explore the role of specific species in putative loss of coexistence. Desaillais et al. identify two species-level quantities: the first measures the total influence of the surrounding community on a focal species, while the second is a proxy for how close that focal species is to being lost, should a perturbation occur. While these two quantities are not mathematically independent, their correlation is not perfect, allowing one to categorize species into distinct ecological roles. A dataset of plant communities with different compositions illustrates how to apply this idea and gain some additional insight into the robustness of coexistence. These results pave the way for a number of potentially rewarding applications. How does the robustness of coexistence differ across network types? For which network types do we find back a more diverse set of ecological roles for species, i.e. for which networks are the two quantities least correlated? 

References

1. Baert, J.M., Janssen, C.R., Sabbe, K., and De Laender, F. (2016). Per capita interactions and stress tolerance drive stress-induced changes in biodiversity effects on ecosystem functions. Nat. Commun. 7, 12486. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12486

2. Pásztor, L., Botta-Dukat, Z., Magyar, G., Czaran, T., and Meszéna, G. (2016). Theory-based ecology: A Darwinian approach 1st ed. (Oxford University Press).

3. Cenci, S., Montero-Castaño, A., and Saavedra, S. (2018). Estimating the effect of the reorganization of interactions on the adaptability of species to changing environments. J. Theor. Biol. 437, 115–125. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.10.016

4. Spaak, J.W., Baert, J.M., Baird, D.J., Eisenhauer, N., Maltby, L., Pomati, F., Radchuk, V., Rohr, J.R., Van den Brink, P.J., and De Laender, F. (2017). Shifts of community composition and population density substantially affect ecosystem function despite invariant richness. Ecol. Lett. 20, 1315–1324. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12828

5. Meszéna, G., Gyllenberg, M., Pásztor, L., and Metz, J.A.J. (2006). Competitive exclusion and limiting similarity: A unified theory. Theor. Popul. Biol. 69, 68–87. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpb.2005.07.001

6. Saavedra, S., Rohr, R.P., Bascompte, J., Godoy, O., Kraft, N.J.B., and Levine, J.M. (2017). A structural approach for understanding multispecies coexistence. Ecol. Monogr. 87, 470–486. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecm.1263

7. Grilli, J., Adorisio, M., Suweis, S., Barabás, G., Banavar, J.R., Allesina, S., and Maritan, A. (2017). Feasibility and coexistence of large ecological communities. Nat. Commun. 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14389

8. Desallais M, Loreau M, Arnoldi J.F. (2024) The distribution of distances to the edge of species coexistence. bioRxiv, ver.4 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.01.21.575550

The distribution of distances to the edge of species coexistenceMario Desallais, Michel Loreau, Jean-François Arnoldi<p>In Lotka-Volterra community models, given a set of biotic interactions, recent approaches have analysed the probability of finding a set of species intrinsic growth rates (representing intraspecific demographic features) that will allow coexist...Coexistence, Community ecology, Competition, Facilitation & Mutualism, Interaction networks, Theoretical ecologyFrederik De Laender2024-02-15 14:17:32 View
21 Jan 2025
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Exploring Rubiaceae fungal endophytes across contrasting tropical forests, tree tissues, and developmental stages

The hidden diversity of fungal endophytes, associated with Rubiaceae of Costa Rican old-growth forests

Recommended by based on reviews by Marion Boisseaux and 1 anonymous reviewer

Endophytic fungi are expected to be hyperdiverse in tropical forests, and here is an article exploring their diversity, hidden in Rubiaceae leaves, in two old-growth forests of Costa Rica. Humberto Castillo-González et al. not only described their diversity, but also test for the impact of leaf development stage, tissue origin, and site location. They distinguish the different fungal lineages and do identify distinct indicators, showing that specialization of endophytic fungi could be related to other factors in tropical forests.

This article is a great example of fungal ecology in the tropics, interacting at fine and large scale with a diversity of hosts. It also invites to discuss the high specialization observed in the tropics, and the ecology of old-growth forests in Costa Rica.

References

Humberto Castillo-González, Jason C. Slot, Stephanie Yarwood, Priscila Chaverri (2025) Exploring Rubiaceae fungal endophytes across contrasting tropical forests, tree tissues, and developmental stages. bioRxiv, ver.3 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.02.13.580172

Exploring Rubiaceae fungal endophytes across contrasting tropical forests, tree tissues, and developmental stagesHumberto Castillo-González, Jason C. Slot, Stephanie Yarwood, Priscila Chaverri<p>Fungal endophytes play a pivotal role in tropical forest dynamics, influencing plant fitness through growth stimulation, disease suppression, stress tolerance, and nutrient mobilization. This study investigates the effects of region, leaf devel...Agroecology, Biodiversity, Community ecology, Microbial ecology & microbiology, Mycology, SymbiosisMelanie Roy2024-02-15 22:42:10 View
29 Jun 2024
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Reassessment of French breeding bird population sizes using citizen science and accounting for species detectability

Reassessment of French breeding bird population sizes: from citizen science observations to nationwide estimates

Recommended by ORCID_LOGO based on reviews by 2 anonymous reviewers

Estimating populations size of widespread, common species in a relatively large and heterogeneous country like France is difficult for several reasons, from having a sample covering well the diverse ecological gradients to accounting for detectability, the fact that absence of a species may represent a false negative, the species being present but not detected. Bird communities have been the focus of a very large number of studies, with some countries like the UK having long traditions of monitoring both common and rare species. Nabias et al. use a large, structured citizen science project to provide new estimates of common bird species, accounting for detectability and using different habitat and climate covariates to extrapolate abundance to non-sampled areas. About 2/3 of the species had estimates higher than what would have been expected using a previous attempt at estimating population size based in part on expert knowledge and projected using estimates of trends to the period covered by the citizen science sampling. Some species showed large differences between the two estimates, which could be in part explained by accounting for detectability.

This paper uses what is called model-based inference (as opposed to design-based inference, that uses the design to make inferences about the whole population; Buckland et al. 2000), both in terms of detectability and habitat suitability. The estimates obtained depend on how well the model components approximate the underlying processes, which in a complex dataset like this one is not easy to assess. But it clearly shows that detectability may have substantial implications for the population size estimates. This is of course not new but has rarely been done at this scale and using a large sample obtained on many species. Interesting further work could focus on testing the robustness of the model-based approach by for example sampling new plots and compare the expected values to the observed values. Such a sampling could be stratified to maximize the discrimination between expected low and high abundances, at least for species where the estimates might be considered as uncertain, or for which estimating population sizes is deemed important.

References

Buckland, S. T., Goudie, I. B. J., & Borchers, D. L. (2000). Wildlife Population Assessment: Past Developments and Future Directions. Biometrics, 56(1), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0006-341X.2000.00001.x

 Nabias, J., Barbaro, L., Fontaine, B., Dupuy, J., Couzi, L., et al. (2024) Reassessment of French breeding bird population sizes using citizen science and accounting for species detectability. HAL, ver. 2 peer-reviewed and recommended by Peer Community in Ecology. https://hal.science/hal-04478371

Reassessment of French breeding bird population sizes using citizen science and accounting for species detectabilityJean Nabias, Luc Barbaro, Benoit Fontaine, Jérémy Dupuy, Laurent Couzi, Clément Vallé, Romain Lorrillière<p style="text-align: justify;">Higher efficiency in large-scale and long-term biodiversity monitoring can be obtained through the use of Essential Biodiversity Variables, among which species population sizes provide key data for conservation prog...Biogeography, Macroecology, Spatial ecology, Metacommunities & Metapopulations, Species distributions, Statistical ecologyNigel Yoccoz2024-02-26 18:10:27 View
26 Aug 2024
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Easy, fast and reproducible Stochastic Cellular Automata with chouca

An R package for flexible and fast Stochastic Cellular Automata modeling

Recommended by ORCID_LOGO based on reviews by Broder Breckling and 1 anonymous reviewer

Stochastic Cellular Automata (SCA) are a popular modelling tool because in, spite of their simplicity, they can generate a variety of spatial patterns. This makes them particularly appreciated, for instance, to validate the insights of analytical or semi-analytical spatial models that make simplifying assumptions, e.g. moment equations models. A first limit to SCA are that as soon as details are added to the model, reproducibility issues may occur. Computation speed is also an issue, especially for large populations. The work by Génin et al. addresses these two issues through the development of an R package, chouca.

The use of the package is designed to be as smooth as possible: users only need to define the type of possible transitions along with their rates, the parameter values, the number of neighbours, and the initial state of the landscape. The main function returns the population dynamics of each state and even the final state of the landscape.

In addition to its flexibility, an asset of chouca resides in its use of the Rcpp package, which compiles the model designed by the user in C++. This allows for high computation speed, which can be further boosted by using parallelising options from R.

In their manuscript, the authors use ecological models to illustrate the more advanced possibilities opened by chouca, e.g. in terms of graphical interpretation or even to estimate parameter values by computing likelihood functions (the implementation in R does make it very appropriate for statistical inference in general). The package still has some limitations, and, for example, it currently only applied to 2D rectangular grids and it cannot include elaborate movement processes. However, some of these could be addressed in future releases and chouca already has the potential to become central for SCA modelling, both for beginners and expert users, especially in ecology.

References

Alexandre Génin, Guillaume Dupont, Daniel Valencia, Mauro Zucconi, M. Isidora Ávila-Thieme, Sergio A. Navarrete, Evie A. Wieters (2024) Easy, fast and reproducible Stochastic Cellular Automata with chouca. bioRxiv, ver.6 peer-reviewed and recommended by Peer Community in Ecology https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.11.08.566206

Easy, fast and reproducible Stochastic Cellular Automata with choucaAlexandre Génin, Guillaume Dupont, Daniel Valencia, Mauro Zucconi, M. Isidora Ávila-Thieme, Sergio A. Navarrete, Evie A. Wieters<p style="text-align: justify;">Stochastic cellular automata (SCA) are models that describe spatial dynamics using a grid of cells that switch between discrete states over time. They are widely used to understand how small-scale processes scale up...Community ecology, Landscape ecology, Spatial ecology, Metacommunities & Metapopulations, Statistical ecology, Theoretical ecologySamuel Alizon2024-03-11 10:54:39 View
26 Aug 2024
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Urban Cepaea nemoralis snails are less likely to have nematodes trapped within their shells

Urbanisation linked to a decline in the proportion of snails with trapped nematodes in their shell

Recommended by based on reviews by Robbie Rae and 1 anonymous reviewer

Urbanisation modifies species’ habitats affecting their density, distribution, fitness, and behaviour with knock-on effects for their parasites’ abundance and transmission (Bradley & Altizer 2007). A meta-analysis found that changes in resource provisioning due to anthropogenic change can have both positive and negative effects on parasite infection in wildlife populations, but that feeding on urban waste had an effect of reducing infection, especially for helminths and protozoa (Becker, Streicker & Altizer 2015). Another study found that urbanisation reduced ectoparasite load in birds, but had no effect on endoparasites or avian flu (Reid et al. 2024). These changes may be due to novel diets reducing transmission via predation upon trophic hosts (Becker, Streicker & Altizer 2015) or behavioural, leading to more time available to preen (Reid et al. 2024). Less is known about how urbanisation affects invertebrates (but see Lewthwaite et al., 2024) and their parasites. This is important considering that invertebrates are often intermediate hosts of, and/or vector other parasites.

Recent work has found that snails and slugs can trap nematodes in their shells to prevent infection (Rae 2017). This newly discovered resistance mechanism reveals that the shell serves an immune defence function. It also provides a record of nematode exposure and documents incidences of resistance to infection as the trapped nematode becomes fixed onto the shell surface (Rae 2017). Dahirel and co-authors exploit this to investigate whether snail-nematode interactions change in response to increasing levels of urbanisation (Dahirel et al. 2024).

They explore whether the proportion of Cepaea nemoralis snails with trapped nematodes in their shell changes across an urbanisation gradient. They also explore whether different phenotypic snail traits, notably shell size, colour, band number and fusion explain the likelihood of having trapped nematodes in their shells. An increase in urbanisation was associated with a decrease in the proportion of snails with trapped nematodes in their shells. At the same time larger shells were more likely to have trapped nematodes, but this effect did not change across the urbanisation gradient. 

The authors discuss that reduced nematode encapsulation in urban environments may be due to lower encounter rate due to either fewer nematodes in urban environments, changes in snail behaviour reducing exposure, or alternatively that urban snails were less resistant to nematode infection. 

It will be interesting to investigate how this resistance mechanism is related to other forms of snail immunity and whether high rates of nematode encapsulation are an indicator of high resistance or high exposure. This will enable nematode trapping to be used as a marker to indicate environments and/or snail populations harbouring high levels of parasitism and further exploitation of museum collections to understand host-parasite interactions in the past (Rae 2017).

References

Becker, D.J., Streicker, D.G. & Altizer, S. (2015) Linking anthropogenic resources to wildlife-pathogen dynamics: a review and meta-analysis. Ecol Lett, 18, 483-495. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12428

Bradley, C.A. & Altizer, S. (2007) Urbanization and the ecology of wildlife diseases. Trends Ecol Evol, 22, 95-102. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2006.11.001

Maxime Dahirel, Hannah Reyné, Katrien De Wolf, Dries Bonte (2024) Urban Cepaea nemoralis snails are less likely to have nematodes trapped within their shells. bioRxiv, ver.4 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.03.07.583959

Lewthwaite, J.M.M., Baiotto, T.M., Brown, B.V., Cheung, Y.Y., Baker, A.J., Lehnen, C., McGlynn, T.P., Shirey, V., Gonzalez, L., Hartop, E., Kerr, P.H., Wood, E. & Guzman, L.M. (2024) Drivers of arthropod biodiversity in an urban ecosystem. Sci Rep, 14, 390. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-50675-3

Rae, R. (2017) The gastropod shell has been co-opted to kill parasitic nematodes. Sci Rep, 7, 4745. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04695-5

Reid, R., Capilla-Lasheras, P., Haddou, Y., Boonekamp, J. & Dominoni, D.M. (2024) The impact of urbanization on health depends on the health metric, life stage and level of urbanization: a global meta-analysis on avian species. Proc Biol Sci, 291, 20240617. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2024.0617

Urban *Cepaea nemoralis* snails are less likely to have nematodes trapped within their shellsMaxime Dahirel, Hannah Reyné, Katrien De Wolf, Dries Bonte<p style="text-align: justify;">Urbanisation is a major human-induced environmental change which can impact not only individual species, but also the way these species interact with each other. As a group, terrestrial molluscs interact frequently ...Host-parasite interactions, Human impactAlison Duncan2024-03-11 11:35:15 View
30 Oct 2024
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General mechanisms for a top-down origin of the predator-prey power law

Rethinking Biomass Scaling in Predators-Preys ecosystems

Recommended by based on reviews by Samraat Pawar and 1 anonymous reviewer

The study titled “General mechanisms for a top-down origin of the predator-prey power law” provides a fresh perspective on the classic predator-prey biomass relationship often observed in ecological communities. Traditionally, predator-prey dynamics have been examined through a bottom-up lens, where prey biomass and energy availability dictate predator populations. However, this study, which instead explores the possibility of a top-down origin for predator-prey power laws, offers a new dimension to our understanding of ecosystem regulation and raises questions about how predator-driven interactions might influence biomass scaling laws independently of prey abundance.

Ecologists have long noted that ecosystems often exhibit sublinear scaling between predator and prey biomasses. This pattern implies that predator biomass does not increase proportionally with prey biomass but at a slower rate, leading to a power-law relationship. Traditional explanations, such as those discussed by Peters (1983) and McGill (2006), have linked this to bottom-up processes, suggesting that increases in prey availability support, but do not fully translate to, larger predator populations due to energy losses in the trophic cascade. However, these explanations assume prey abundance as the principal driver. This new work raises an intriguing question: could density-dependent predator interactions, such as competition and interference, be equally or more important in creating this observed power law?

The authors hypothesized that density-dependent predator interactions might independently control predator biomass, even when prey is abundant. To test this, they combined predator and prey biomass dynamics equation based on a modified Lotka-Volterra model with agent-based models (ABMs) on a spatial grid, simulating predator-prey populations under varying environmental gradients and density-dependent conditions. These models allowed them to incorporate predator-specific factors, such as intraspecific competition (predator self-regulation) and predation interference, offering a quantitative framework to observe whether these top-down dynamics could indeed explain the observed biomass scaling independently of prey population changes.

Their results show that density-dependent predator dynamics, particularly at high predator densities, can yield sublinear scaling in predator-prey biomass relationships. This aligns well with empirical data, such as African mammalian ecosystems where predators seem to self-regulate under high prey availability by competing amongst themselves rather than expanding in direct proportion to prey biomass. Such findings support a shift from bottom-up perspectives to a model where top-down processes drive population regulation and biomass scaling.

I think that the work by Mazzarisi and collaborators (2024) offers a thought-provoking twist on predator-prey dynamics and suggests that our traditional frameworks may benefit from a broader, more predator-centered focus.

References

1. Onofrio Mazzarisi, Matthieu Barbier, Matteo Smerlak (2024) General mechanisms for a top-down origin of the predator-prey power law. bioRxiv, ver.2 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.04.04.588057

2. Peters, R. H. (1986). The ecological implications of body size (Vol. 2). Cambridge university press.

3. McGill, B. J. (2006). “A renaissance in the study of abundance.” Science, 314(5801), 770-772. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1134920

General mechanisms for a top-down origin of the predator-prey power lawOnofrio Mazzarisi, Matthieu Barbier, Matteo Smerlak<p style="text-align: justify;">The ratio of predator-to-prey biomass density is not constant along ecological gradients: denser ecosystems tend to have fewer predators per prey, following a scaling relation known as the ``predator-prey power law'...Allometry, Community ecology, Food webs, Macroecology, Theoretical ecologySamir Simon Suweis2024-04-06 21:04:59 View
07 Oct 2024
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Guidance framework to apply best practices in ecological data analysis: Lessons learned from building Galaxy-Ecology

Best practices for ecological analysis are required to act on concrete challenges

Recommended by ORCID_LOGO based on reviews by Nick Isaac and 1 anonymous reviewer

A core challenge facing ecologists is to work through an ever-increasing amount of data. The accelerating decline in biodiversity worldwide, mounting pressure of anthropogenic impacts, and increasing demand for actionable indicators to guide effective policy means that monitoring will only intensify, and rely on tools that can generate even more information (Gonzalez et al., 2023). How, then, do we handle this new volume and diversity of data?

This is the question Royaux et al. (2024) are tackling with their contribution. By introducing both a conceptual ("How should we think about our work?") and an operational ("Here is a tool to do our work with") framework, they establish a series of best practices for the analysis of ecological data.

It is easy to think about best practices in ecological data analysis in its most proximal form: is it good statistical practice? Is the experimental design correct? These have formed the basis of many recommendations over the years (see e.g. Popovic et al., 2024, for a recent example). But the contribution of Royaux et al. focuses on a different part of the analysis pipeline: the computer science (and software engineering) aspect of it.

As data grows in volume and complexity, the code needed to handle it follows the same trend. It is not a surprise, therefore, to see that the demand for programming skills in ecologists has doubled recently (Feng et al., 2020), prompting calls to make computational literacy a core component of undergraduate education (Farrell & Carrey, 2018). But beyond training, an obvious way to make computational analysis ecological data more reliable and effective is to build better tools. This is precisely what Royaux et al. have achieved.

They illustrate their approach through their experience building Galaxy-Ecology, a computing environment for ecological analysis: by introducing a clear taxonomy of computing concepts (data exploration, pre-processing, analysis, representation), with a hierarchy between them (formatting, data correction, anonymization), they show that we can think about the pipeline going from data to results in a way that is more systematized, and therefore more prone to generalization.

We may buckle at the idea of yet another ontology, or yet another framework, for our work, but I am convinced that the work of Royaux et al. is precisely what our field needs. Because their levels of atomization (their term for the splitting of complex pipelines into small, single-purpose tasks) are easy to understand, and map naturally onto tasks that we already perform, it is likely to see wide adoption. Solving the big, existential challenges of monitoring and managing biodiversity at the global scale requires the adoption of good practices, and a tool like Galaxy-Ecology goes a long way towards this goal.

References

Farrell, K.J., and Carey, C.C. (2018). Power, pitfalls, and potential for integrating computational literacy into undergraduate ecology courses. Ecol. Evol. 8, 7744-7751.
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4363

Feng, X., Qiao, H., and Enquist, B. (2020). Doubling demands in programming skills call for ecoinformatics education. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 18, 123-124.
https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2179
 
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Coline Royaux, Jean-Baptiste Mihoub, Marie Jossé, Dominique Pelletier, Olivier Norvez, Yves Reecht, Anne Fouilloux, Helena Rasche, Saskia Hiltemann, Bérénice Batut, Marc Eléaume, Pauline Seguineau, Guillaume Massé, Alan Amossé, Claire Bissery, Romain Lorrilliere, Alexis Martin, Yves Bas, Thimothée Virgoulay, Valentin Chambon, Elie Arnaud, Elisa Michon, Clara Urfer, Eloïse Trigodet, Marie Delannoy, Gregoire Loïs, Romain Julliard, Björn Grüning, Yvan Le Bras (2024) Guidance framework to apply best practices in ecological data analysis: Lessons learned from building Galaxy-Ecology. EcoEvoRxiv, ver.3 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology. 
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Guidance framework to apply best practices in ecological data analysis: Lessons learned from building Galaxy-EcologyColine Royaux, Jean-Baptiste Mihoub, Marie Jossé, Dominique Pelletier, Olivier Norvez, Yves Reecht, Anne Fouilloux, Helena Rasche, Saskia Hiltemann, Bérénice Batut, Marc Eléaume, Pauline Seguineau, Guillaume Massé, Alan Amossé, Claire Bissery, Rom...<p>Numerous conceptual frameworks exist for best practices in research data and analysis (e.g. Open Science and FAIR principles). In practice, there is a need for further progress to improve transparency, reproducibility, and confidence in ecology...Statistical ecologyTimothée Poisot2024-04-12 10:13:59 View
12 Mar 2025
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A framework to quantify the vulnerability of insular biota to global change

Assessing vulnerability of island biodiversity to global change

Recommended by ORCID_LOGO based on reviews by T Johnson and 1 anonymous reviewer

Islands may represent just a small fraction (6.67%) of the planet’s land but they host a disproportionate 20% of the world’s biodiversity. Yet islands are highly vulnerable to human-induced change. Out of all IUCN Red list species, almost half of them are found on islands (Russell and Kueffer, 2019) while from the approximately 800 known extinctions that have occurred since the European expansion around the world, 75% have occurred on islands (IUCN, 2017).
 
Vulnerability is defined as “the degree to which a system is likely to experience harm due to exposure to a hazard” (Fuessel, 2007). It is meaningful to express vulnerability let s say of a population or species to a specific threat, pressure, or stress (like for instance the highly studied species vulnerability to climate change (Pacifici et al., 2015). Vulnerability is typically made up of three components: exposure (the extent of stress or threat that the species encounters and is projected to encounter), sensitivity (the ability of a species to persist under a given stress or threat), adaptation (the ability of the species to adapt to changes in a given stress or threat). 
 
When thinking of these three components, it becomes quickly evident that island biodiversity should be “naturally” vulnerable to global change stress (Frankham et al., 2002). First, it is hard to escape for insular species compared to mainland ones meaning that they cannot avoid exposure. Second, insular species are highly sensitive to any stress and stochastic events given their high specialisation due to their endemism. Third, insular species are less likely to adapt to new threats due to their small population sizes and naturally fragmented distribution ranges that both decrease their genetic diversity (aka adaptation potential). Thus, estimating the vulnerability of insular species is an important step towards better management and mitigation of their risk to extinction to ongoing global change. But an assessment framework designed for insular species is currently lacking.
 
Bellard and colleagues (Bellard et al., 2025) contribution is exactly addressing this objective. The authors present an adapted framework aimed to quantify the vulnerability of terrestrial insular biota by incorporating the idiosyncrasies of island biota: the island syndrome (ie the idiosyncratic evolutionary outcomes that arise in insular environments), the isolated nature of islands, and their high levels of endemism. It is the consequences of these three features that the authors highlight on expanding their insular vulnerability assessment. More in detail, Bellard et al (2025) build on existing vulnerability frameworks that are not specific to island ecosystems by focusing on the inclusion of multiple threats and enlarging the dimensions of diversity (taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic diversity). In that sense, this work stands out as it delivers a missing framework specific for island biodiversity, without minimising its potential as an extension on existing mainland (not island) vulnerability assessments.
 
The framework consists of 5 steps: 1) define the scope of the vulnerability assessment in terms of spatial and temporal extent, relevant threats, and studied biota; 2) determine the markers of exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity; 3) compute measures of vulnerability and its components; and 4) conduct an uncertainty analysis to improve the vulnerability assessment. Step 5 is basically the use of the actual vulnerability assessment for practical conservation action and policy, and the authors are showing (Box 2 in Bellard et al (2025)) how their proposed vulnerability assessment could make the link to what is actually developed for (ie identifying which species are most vulnerable and what drives their vulnerability).
 
No doubt there is a growing number of literature on the design and application of biodiversity vulnerability assessments. Yet, this contribution is making the case for a special treatment of island biodiversity vulnerability assessments, while also providing a rather complete reading to a newcomer into vulnerability assessment frameworks.
 

References

Bellard Céline, Marino Clara, Butt Nathalie, Fernández-Palacios José María, Rigal François, Robuchon Marine, Lenoir Jonathan, Irl Severin, Benítez-López Ana, Capdevila Pol, Zhu G, Caetano Gabriel, Denelle Pierre, Philippe-Lesaffre Martin, Schipper Aafke, M Foden Wendy, Kissling W. Daniel, Leclerc Camille (2025) A framework to quantify the vulnerability of insular biota to global change. HAL, ver.3 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Ecology https://hal.science/hal-04550966

Frankham, R., Briscoe, D. A., and Ballou, J. D. (2002). Introduction to Conservation Genetics. Cambridge University Press.Fuessel, H.-M. (2007). Vulnerability: A generally applicable conceptual framework for climate change research. Glob. Environ. Change 17, 155–167. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2006.05.002

IUCN (2017). IUCN 2017 : International Union for Conservation of Nature annual report 2017. Available at: https://iucn.org/resources/annual-reports/iucn-2017-international-union-conservation-nature-annual-report-2017 (Accessed March 10, 2025).

Pacifici, M., Foden, W. B., Visconti, P., Watson, J. E. M., Butchart, S. H. M., Kovacs, K. M., et al. (2015). Assessing species vulnerability to climate change. Nat. Clim. Change 5, 215–224. https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2448

Russell, J. C., and Kueffer, C. (2019). Island Biodiversity in the Anthropocene. Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour. 44, 31–60. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-environ-101718-033245

A framework to quantify the vulnerability of insular biota to global changeBellard Céline, Marino Clara, Butt Nathalie, Fernández-Palacios José María, Rigal François, Robuchon Marine, Lenoir Jonathan, Irl Severin, Benítez-López Ana, Capdevila Pol, Zhu G, Caetano Gabriel, Denelle Pierre, Philippe-Lesaffre Martin, Schipper...<p>The majority of vulnerability assessments of biodiversity to global changes have so far been applied to, and designed for, mainland systems, overlooking islands. However, islands harbour unique biodiversity and are epicentres of ongoing extinct...Biodiversity, Biogeography, Biological invasions, Climate change, MacroecologyVasilis Dakos2024-04-18 15:43:06 View