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Snails chat chemically about food availability

Slow moving animals, like snails, pay a high price for moving the wrong way. If they send each other information about the best choice via chemical signals, they could optimize their movement decisions considerably. Photograph of the great pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis...

April Cover

The photo on the April cover was taken by Michael Singer, one of the authors to the paper: "The struggle for safety: effectiveness of caterpillar defenses against bird predation" by Lichter-Marck et al. "The photo was taken in the field. I came across the caterpillar...

Effects of tree diversity on insects

Plant diversity, typically measured as the number of plant species at a local site, plays a primary role in regulating and maintaining many ecosystem processes such as decomposition rates, plant growth, and resistance against disturbance. In addition, plant diversity...

Editor's Choice March and April

March was a hectic project month in Belgium, with a series of important deadlines. A shame that I did not provide blog notes for our editor’s choices for March - they are great. Timothee Poisot and colleagues published a forum paper on the context-dependency of species...

How does influenza virus affect behaviour?

Avian influenza viruses may be spread by wild birds, and waterfowl in particular. In order to model the dispersal of these viruses, it is important to assess the effects of infection on the birds’ behaviour. We compared the local and regional movements of mallard ducks...

What can ecology learn from clinical medicine?

Our Forum article on how medical surrogate approaches could be applied to ecology is the result of research being done by the surrogate ecology group at The Australian National University (comprised of the paper’s authors). While discussing how to make a new and...

Welcome Florian Altermatt - new SE

We are very happy to welcome Florian Altermatt, University of Zurich, to the Oikos Editorial Board. Below, he introduces himself: 1. What's you main research focus at the moment? My main interests at the moment are to understand how spatial network configuration shapes...

Why do the trees grov where they grow.

The southwestern Ecuador holds one of the last remnants of seasonally tropical dry forest of the Tumbesian region, a place where amazing biodiversity, endemism and adaptation to extreme conditions can be found. However, this forest face high anthropogenic pressures...

Herbivory variation - latitude or climate?

Ecologists have repeatedly reported that lower latitudes are associated with increases in herbivore abundance and damage. However, recent studies have confirmed that this pattern is not as common as previously thought. In our paper, " Latitudinal variation in herbivory...

How do long-lived species respond to environmental changes?

New model predicts how long-lived species experience changes in the environment. Presented in the Oikos Early View paper " An integrated population model for a long-lived ungulate: more efficient data use with Bayesian methods" by Aline M. Lee and coworkers. Watch...

Castration or death?

Not a choice many of us would care to face. But this is an essential risk management decision made by the snail Littorina littorea based on the micro-positioning it chooses within the intertidal zone on rocky coastlines of the North Atlantic. If a snail chooses to live...

What is an apex predator?

Always wondered about the apex predator? Read the Early View paper in Oikos "What is an apex predator?" by Arian D. Wallasch and co-workers. Below is the author's summary of the study: What is the difference between a dingo and fox? We had been counting animal tracks...

Dispersal among local communities

Whether ecological communities can exhibit historical contingency is an important question in community ecology. Ample theoretical and empirical evidence has shown that difference in assembly history can lead to alternative community states that differ in species...

Control of large carnivores could backfire if mesopredators are released

Humans cull large carnivore populations in areas around the world to reduce predation on wild and domestic ungulates. However, medium-sized ungulates such as sheep and deer are often preyed upon by smaller predators such as coyotes and lynx as well. Suppression of...

The complexities of climate on the feeding ecology of the polar bear

There may be no more prevalent icon of climate change in the Arctic than the polar bear. The story is simple: a warming climate is causing reductions in the volume, extent and seasonal duration of Arctic sea ice. Polar bears use the sea ice surface for hunting seals,...

Ongoing plant invasion: increasing dispersal ability during range expansion

Invasive populations within the invaded range are often regarded as a homogeneous group in the studies of invasive plants. However, since invasive plants can evolve very rapidly and there may be lots of differences between old and young invasive populations, the...

Ecology might not be so complicated after all

Ecosystem-shaping interactions between consumers and plants are notoriously variable. Indeed, even within a single system (and a single pair of interacting species) enormous variability can be seen -- the same consumer might increase plant biomass at one place and time...

To the North – habitat selection of geese during their spring migration to the high Arctic

Understanding the distribution of species over space and time is an important aspect of ecological research and has great value for wildlife and land management. How animals choose foraging sites is typically influenced by a variety of environmental conditions...

Editor's Choice February

The editor’s choice papers are for February are two meta-analyses: Bracken and colleagues studied signatures of nutrient limitation in primary producers ; Jauni et al. how non-native plant species benefit from disturbance . Matthew Bracken and colleagues collected data...

Climate change or competition most important for population dynamics?

It is usually delightful to observe forest birds as they playfully hop from branch to branch chirping, or sing their hearts out. But there is a dark side to a birds’ behaviour that is less often acknowledged. Many birds engage in a fierce (and often fatal) struggle for...

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