9 results match your criteria: "Department of Biology University of New Mexico Albuquerque NM USA.[Affiliation]"

Background: Plant-pollinator community diversity has been found to decrease under conditions of drought stress; however, research into the temporal dimensions of this phenomenon remains limited. In this study, we investigated the effect of seasonal drought on the temporal niche dynamics of entomophilous flowering plants in a water-limited ecosystem. We hypothesized that closely related native and exotic plants would tend to share similar life history and that peak flowering events would therefore coincide with phylogenetic clustering in plant communities based on expected phenological responses of plant functional types to limitations in soil moisture availability.

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Abiotic and biotic heterogeneity result in divergent patterns of natural selection in nature, with important consequences for fundamental evolutionary processes including local adaptation, speciation, and diversification. However, increasing amounts of the global terrestrial surface are homogenized by agriculture (which covers nearly 50% of terrestrial vegetated land surface) and other anthropogenic activities. Agricultural intensification leads to highly simplified biotic communities for many taxa, which may alter natural selection through biotic selective agents.

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Rapid evolution can influence the ecology of populations, communities, and ecosystems, but the importance of evolution for ecological dynamics remains unclear, largely because the contexts in which evolution is powerful are poorly resolved. Here, we carry out a large observational study to test hypotheses about context dependency of eco-evolutionary patterns previously identified on the stick insect . Experiments and observations conducted in 2011 and 2012 documented predator-mediated negative effects of camouflage maladaptation (i.

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Patterns of insect herbivory may follow predictable geographical gradients, with greater herbivory at low latitudes. However, biogeographic studies of insect herbivory often do not account for multiple abiotic factors (e.g.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sexually selected traits, like lizard male dewlaps, may become more important in environments where the breeding season is limited, which impacts their courtship behavior.
  • A study tested the connection between dewlap size and seasonal breeding in 44 Mexican lizard species but found that while a relationship existed initially, it disappeared once evolutionary relationships (phylogeny) were considered.
  • The findings suggest that seasonality does not strongly drive the evolution of dewlap size, highlighting the complexity of understanding how multiple selection pressures influence trait development.
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The sea otter () is a marine mammal hunted to near extinction during the 1800s. Despite their well-known modern importance as a keystone species, we know little about historical sea otter ecology. Here, we characterize the ecological niche of ancient southern sea otters () using δC analysis and δN analysis of bones recovered from archaeological sites spanning ~7,000 to 350 years before present ( = 112 individuals) at five regions along the coast of California.

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In the southwestern USA, recent large-scale die-offs of conifers raise the question of their resilience and mortality under droughts. To date, little is known about the interannual structural response to droughts. We hypothesized that piñon pines () respond to drought by reducing the drop of leaf water potential in branches from year to year through needle morphological adjustments.

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Plants with crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) are increasing their abundance in drylands worldwide. The drivers and mechanisms underlying the increased dominance of CAM plants and CAM expression (i.e.

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We compared egg size phenotypes and tested several predictions from the optimal egg size (OES) and bet-hedging theories in two North American desert-dwelling sister tortoise taxa, and , that inhabit different climate spaces: relatively unpredictable and more predictable climate spaces, respectively. Observed patterns in both species differed from the predictions of OES in several ways. Mean egg size increased with maternal body size in both species.

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