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Showing 1–7 of 7 results
Advanced filters: Author: Conor Waldock Clear advanced filters
  • Nicholas Payne et al. use physiological and population-level abundance data from 823 fish species to examine how heating tolerance scales at both the individual and population level. This study shows that heating tolerance declines in the lab and the wild at the same rate, and for a given temperature, individuals and populations from tropical areas have broader heating tolerances than temperate species.

    • Nicholas L. Payne
    • Simon A. Morley
    • Amanda E. Bates
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Biology
    Volume: 4, P: 1-5
  • Explainable Artificial Intelligence can improve conservation decisions by revealing hidden insights to where human impacts on biodiversity are greatest. In this investigation of freshwater fish in Switzerland, around 90% of potentially habitable areas were negatively impacted human influences - these areas form the species’ “shadow distribution”.

    • Conor Waldock
    • Bernhard Wegscheider
    • Ole Seehausen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-15
  • The authors use 12 years of broadscale survey data across 838 temperate and tropical coastal sites to investigate shifts in marine taxa range edges at the community level. They show that while some species respond rapidly to change, evidence for mass poleward migration is limited.

    • Yann Herrera Fuchs
    • Graham J. Edgar
    • Rick D. Stuart-Smith
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 14, P: 1087-1092
  • At a time when protecting the environment is urgent, dealing with inherent uncertainties in the responses of biodiversity to disturbances is essential. This study promotes a promising tool to assess the vulnerability of species assemblages to guide protection efforts even if species response and disturbance regimes are poorly documented.

    • Arnaud Auber
    • Conor Waldock
    • David Mouillot
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-13
  • Species identity and richness both contribute biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships. Here the authors apply a decomposition approach inspired by the Price equation to a global dataset of reef fish community biomass, finding that increased richness and community compositions favouring large-bodied species enhance biomass.

    • Jonathan S. Lefcheck
    • Graham J. Edgar
    • Aneil F. Agrawal
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-9
  • Biodiversity time series from temperate regions reveal that marine communities in warmer places gain species but lose individuals with warming, but colder environments show weaker trends, whereas no systematic relationships between biodiversity and temperature change were detectable for terrestrial communities.

    • Laura H. Antão
    • Amanda E. Bates
    • Aafke M. Schipper
    Research
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 4, P: 927-933