All Stories

  1. The ecological memory of landscape complexity shapes diversity of freshwater communities
  2. Beyond yield and toward sustainability: Using applied ecology to support biodiversity conservation and food production
  3. Tree species occurring in Amazonian wetland forests consistently show broader range sizes and niche breadths than trees in upland forests
  4. The effects of white-popinac on regenerating seasonal semideciduous forests propagate across spatial scales
  5. Species interactions drive continuous assembly of freshwater communities in stochastic environments
  6. Understanding temporal variability across trophic levels and spatial scales in freshwater ecosystems
  7. Direct and indirect relationships of climate and land use change with food webs in lakes and streams
  8. Land‐use intensification systematically alters the size structure of aquatic communities in the Neotropics
  9. High compositional dissimilarity among small communities is decoupled from environmental variation
  10. Multi‐lingual literature searches are needed to unveil global knowledge
  11. Ecological stability propagates across spatial scales and trophic levels in freshwater ecosystems
  12. High compositional dissimilarity among small communities is decoupled from environmental variation: a multicontinental analysis of riverine fish
  13. A multi-continental analysis of the responses of freshwater food webs to climate and land use change
  14. Experimental evidence that host choice by parasites is age-dependent in a fish-monogenean system
  15. Stochastic colonisation dynamics can be a major driver of temporal β diversity in Atlantic Forest coastal stream communities
  16. Revisiting the drivers of acoustic similarities in tropical anuran assemblages
  17. Drivers of assemblage‐wide calling activity in tropical anurans and the role of temporal resolution
  18. Interactive persistent effects of past land‐cover and its trajectory on tropical freshwater biodiversity
  19. Thresholds of freshwater biodiversity in response to riparian vegetation loss in the Neotropical region
  20. Community size can affect the signals of ecological drift and niche selection on biodiversity
  21. Ecological similarity explains species abundance distribution of small mammal communities
  22. Heterogenization of remaining biodiversity in fragmented tropical forests across agricultural landscapes
  23. Community size affects the signals of selection and ecological drift on biodiversity
  24. Dispersal dilemmas
  25. Subtropical streams harbour higher genus richness and lower abundance of insects compared to boreal streams, but scale matters
  26. Effects of agriculture and topography on tropical amphibian species and communities
  27. Ecological versatility and the assembly of multiple competitors: cautionary notes for assembly inferences
  28. Species-poor and low-lying sites are more ecologically unique in a hyperdiverse Amazon region: Evidence from multiple taxonomic groups
  29. Metacommunity detectives: Confronting models based on niche and stochastic assembly scenarios with empirical data from a tropical stream network
  30. Predicting occupancy and abundance by niche position, niche breadth and body size in stream organisms
  31. Latin American scientific contribution to ecology
  32. Main predictors of periphyton species richness depend on adherence strategy and cell size
  33. Idiosyncratic responses of aquatic and terrestrial insects to different levels of environmental integrity in riparian zones in a karst tropical dry forest region
  34. Defaunation and biomass collapse of mammals in the largest Atlantic forest remnant
  35. Simulating the role of connectivity in shaping stream insect metacommunities under colonization cycle dynamics
  36. Phylogenetic clustering among aggressive competitors: evidence from odonate assemblages along a riverine gradient
  37. Deconstructing richness patterns by commonness and rarity reveals bioclimatic and spatial effects in black fly metacommunities
  38. Phylogenies and traits provide distinct insights about the historical and contemporary assembly of aquatic insect communities
  39. Evidence of species sorting driving aquatic beetles associated with woody debris in a transitional region between Cerrado and Atlantic Forest biomes
  40. Diet Overlap and Foraging Activity between Feral Pigs and Native Peccaries in the Pantanal
  41. Dispersal traits drive the phylogenetic distance decay of similarity in Neotropical stream metacommunities
  42. How Should Ecologists Define Sampling Effort? The Potential of Procrustes Analysis for Studying Variation in Community Composition
  43. How Does Landscape Modification Induce Biological Homogenization in Tropical Stream Metacommunities?
  44. Community-Wide Spatial and Temporal Discordances of Seed-Seedling Shadows in a Tropical Rainforest
  45. A comparative analysis reveals weak relationships between ecological factors and beta diversity of stream insect metacommunities at two spatial levels
  46. Metacommunity organisation, spatial extent and dispersal in aquatic systems: patterns, processes and prospects
  47. Should phylogenetic and functional diversity metrics compose macroinvertebrate multimetric indices for stream biomonitoring?
  48. The taxonomic distinctness of macroinvertebrate communities of Atlantic Forest streams cannot be predicted by landscape and climate variables, but traditional biodiversity indices can
  49. Biodiversity analyses: are aquatic ecologists doing any better and differently than terrestrial ecologists?
  50. Nutrient enrichment is related to two facets of beta diversity for stream invertebrates across the United States
  51. Perspectives on the use of lakes and ponds as model systems for macroecological research
  52. Forest destructuring as revealed by the temporal dynamics of fundamental species – Case study of Santa Genebra Forest in Brazil
  53. Short-term effects of visitor trampling on macroinvertebrates in karst streams in an ecotourism region
  54. Variance partitioning of deconstructed periphyton communities: does the use of biological traits matter?
  55. Metacommunity structuring in stream networks: roles of dispersal mode, distance type, and regional environmental context
  56. Responses of Aquatic Insect Functional Diversity to Landscape Changes in Atlantic Forest
  57. Passive and active dispersers respond similarly to environmental and spatial processes: an example from metacommunity dynamics of tree hole invertebrates
  58. A Metacommunity Framework for Enhancing the Effectiveness of Biological Monitoring Strategies
  59. Concordance between macroinvertebrate communities and the typological classification of white and clear-water streams in Western Brazilian Amazonia
  60. The terminology of metacommunity ecology
  61. Focusing on variation: methods and applications of the concept of beta diversity in aquatic ecosystems
  62. Relationships between multiple biological groups and classification schemes in a Neotropical floodplain
  63. Common and rare species respond to similar niche processes in macroinvertebrate metacommunities
  64. DNA barcoding ofPodonomus(Chironomidae, Podonominae) enables stage association of a named species and reveals hidden diversity in Brazilian inselbergs
  65. Spatial autocorrelation analysis allows disentangling the balance between neutral and niche processes in metacommunities
  66. Weak evidence for determinants of citation frequency in ecological articles
  67. Untangling associations between chironomid taxa in Neotropical streams using local and landscape filters
  68. O Desafio da Normatização de Informações de Biodiversidade para Gestão de Águas: Aproximando Cientistas e Gestores
  69. The role of niche measures in explaining the abundance–distribution relationship in tropical lotic chironomids
  70. No evidence for environmental and spatial processes in structuring phytoplankton communities
  71. First report of Simuliidae and Chironomidae (Diptera) living on nymphs of Lachlania Hagen (Ephemeroptera: Oligoneuriidae) in South America
  72. Phenological patterns of neotropical lotic chironomids: Is emergence constrained by environmental factors?
  73. Species richness, abundance, and body size relationships from a neotropical chironomid assemblage: Looking for patterns
  74. DOES ENVIRONMENTAL TEMPERATURE VARIATION AFFECT BODY SIZE OF TWO LOTIC TANYTARSINI (DIPTERA: CHIRONOMIDAE) FROM THE NEOTROPICS?
  75. Diversidade de Chironomidae (Diptera) em dois córregos de baixa ordem na região central do Estado de São Paulo, através da coleta de exúvias de pupa
  76. Occurrence of chironomid larvae living inside fallen-fruits in Atlantic Forest streams, Brasil