Publications by authors named "N Loeuille"

Article Synopsis
  • The movement and distribution of essential elements in nature significantly affect the structure and function of biological communities, but our understanding of these distributions, especially for bioavailable elements, is still limited.
  • The authors propose a quantitative framework that combines distribution models and spatial analysis techniques to study how these elements are distributed over different areas.
  • This research provides insight into the relationships among elements in ecosystems, which can be measured and used to identify key factors that influence community and ecosystem dynamics.
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Dispersal and establishment strategies are highly variable. Each strategy is associated with specific costs and benefits, and understanding which factors favour or disfavour a strategy is a key issue in ecology and evolution. Ants exhibit several strategies of establishment, i.

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Redesigning agrosystems to include more ecological regulations can help feed a growing human population, preserve soils for future productivity, limit dependency on synthetic fertilizers, and reduce agriculture contribution to global changes such as eutrophication and warming. However, guidelines for redesigning cropping systems from natural systems to make them more sustainable remain limited. Synthetizing the knowledge on biogeochemical cycles in natural ecosystems, we outline four ecological systems that synchronize the supply of soluble nutrients by soil biota with the fluctuating nutrient demand of plants.

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The realization that evolutionary feedbacks need to be considered to fully grasp ecological dynamics has sparked interest in the effect of evolution on community properties like coexistence and productivity. However, little is known about the evolution of community robustness and productivity along diversification processes in species-rich systems. We leverage the recent structural approach to coexistence together with adaptive dynamics to study such properties and their relationships in a general trait-based model of competition on a niche axis.

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