Publications by authors named "Edwin van den Berg"

Article Synopsis
  • Most eco-evolutionary research has primarily examined the ecological impacts of evolution in individual species, leaving a gap in understanding how multiple species evolving together affect ecosystems.
  • We conducted experiments on zooplankton communities with various genetic backgrounds and heatwave exposure to assess the ecological consequences of simultaneous evolution.
  • Our findings reveal that evolutionary changes in one species can significantly influence the population dynamics of others, highlighting that predictions based solely on single-species evolution may not accurately reflect community-level ecological outcomes.
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Biotic interactions are suggested to be key factors structuring bacterioplankton community assembly but are rarely included in metacommunity studies. Eutrophication of ponds and lakes provides a useful opportunity to evaluate how bacterioplankton assembly is affected by specific environmental conditions, especially also by biotic interactions with other trophic levels such as phytoplankton and zooplankton. Here, we evaluated the importance of deterministic and stochastic processes on bacterioplankton community assembly in 35 shallow ponds along a eutrophication gradient in Belgium and assessed the direct and indirect effects of phytoplankton and zooplankton community variation on bacterioplankton assembly through a path analysis and network analysis.

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Diapause is a feature of the life cycle of many invertebrates by which unfavourable environmental conditions can be outlived. The seasonal timing of diapause allows organisms to adapt to seasonal changes in habitat suitability and thus is key to their fitness. In the planktonic crustacean Daphnia, various cues can induce the production of diapause stages that are resistant to heat, drought or freezing and contain one to two embryos in developmental arrest.

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