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1 f AAs that have labile nitrogen atoms (i.e. 'trophic' AA) had higher delta(15) N values in yolk and a
2 e inherent immunomodulatory characteristics, trophic activity, high invitro self-renewal ability, and
4 lusions about the risk that climate-mediated trophic asynchrony may pose to populations worldwide.
5 met to demonstrate that temperature-mediated trophic asynchrony poses a growing risk to consumers.
6 atch-mismatch hypothesis (MMH) suggests that trophic asynchrony will have negative impacts on average
8 ances (PFAS), are increasingly found in high trophic avifauna and are of concern to potentially impac
9 ts of experimental N and P enrichment on the trophic basis of macroinvertebrate production and flows
10 rse social and economic consequences of this trophic cascade are unknown, particularly across large r
12 ive interactions that occur as frequently as trophic cascades and are equally important drivers of ec
13 e richest examples of behaviourally mediated trophic cascades and demonstrations of how enemy-risk ef
14 tural land conversion may lead to widespread trophic cascades and in some cases irreversible changes
16 h results in a quantitative and reproducible trophic categorization scheme, as well as high-resolutio
17 e trout from six populations to estimate the trophic changes between and within individuals through o
18 ze on ITV over time, and (b) disentangle the trophic changes due to ontogeny from other sources of va
20 led to decreasing APPP sufficient to change trophic classification from "eutrophic' to "mesotrophic"
22 should target restoring ecosystems with high trophic complexity to facilitate the recovery of large c
25 To obtain a more nuanced understanding of trophic control over large scales, we explored long-term
26 ther cDCs could differentiate in response to trophic cues delivered by mesenchymal components of the
27 tive review to evaluate support for iRLT and trophic differences along range margins, surveying the m
34 , our results suggest that niche breadth and trophic diversification depend more on the presence of o
35 neutral genetic polymorphism are decoupled: trophic diversity being greatest in intermediate-sized l
43 lo simulations to account for variability in trophic ecology on Svalbard when predicting bioaccumulat
44 hard-shelled insects, indicating a shift in trophic ecology to insectivory associated with diminutiv
46 and human islets and find that the beta cell trophic effect of Wisp1 is dependent on Akt signaling.
47 sonally breeding songbird and found that the trophic effects of one forebrain song nucleus on its tar
48 ntion are impacted by habitat conditions and trophic effects, especially oxygen conditions and appare
49 f plant partners and seasonal variability in trophic exchanges between the symbionts introduce additi
51 A-axis activity; inflammatory processes; and trophic factor regulation were related to the severity o
52 rg3, two members of the neuregulin family of trophic factors, regulate the inhibitory outputs and exc
53 ematical framework for investigating how tri-trophic food chains persist in seasonal environments.
55 er trophic groups (nematodes) than for lower trophic groups (microorganisms) and primary producers (p
56 m nutrient enrichment were weaker for higher trophic groups (nematodes) than for lower trophic groups
57 ffected functional diversity across multiple trophic groups (primary producers, mutualists, herbivore
58 only plants but were also expressed by other trophic groups and, to a similar degree, in aboveground
60 relations between the species richness of 16 trophic groups, 10 ecosystem functions, and 15 ecosystem
63 nbiased, and reproducible approach to define trophic guilds and apply recent advances in machine lear
64 We then use network analysis to identify 8 trophic guilds and Bayesian phylogenetic modeling to sho
65 n often leads to inconsistent definitions of trophic guilds based on expert opinion, especially when
66 Bayesian phylogenetic modeling to show that trophic guilds can be predicted based on phylogeny and m
67 experts disagree on the assignment of broad trophic guilds for more than 20% of species, which hampe
68 ven by widespread declines across a range of trophic guilds, with subsequent recovery unevenly distri
70 Our work demonstrates the usefulness of the trophic incoherence parameter when considering models of
71 We utilise a topological measure called the trophic incoherence parameter, q, which effectively gaug
73 er, it is challenging to delineate potential trophic interactions across an ecosystem, and a paucity
75 obial community assembly through the lens of trophic interactions also has important implications for
76 ite sharks and the use of shared habitat and trophic interactions between squid and white sharks, in
77 se machine learning to test whether pairwise trophic interactions can be predicted with accuracy.
79 source and habitat use, niche occupation and trophic interactions from a stable isotope perspective o
80 cosystems to climate change, but the role of trophic interactions in facilitating or preventing range
81 e assessed how temperature affects reef fish trophic interactions in the Western Atlantic and modeled
82 dings stress the importance of incorporating trophic interactions into climate change predictions.
84 ong species and trophic levels, making their trophic interactions more prone to changes as oceans war
86 ibility') in food webs emerges from species' trophic interactions remains a long-standing open questi
87 s that the assembly and persistence of multi-trophic interactions requires that species at lower trop
88 on in the Florida Keys may preserve critical trophic interactions that indirectly promote coral succe
90 ls and research approaches to plant defense, trophic interactions, coevolutionary dynamics, food secu
91 eoretical advances to argue that networks of trophic interactions, in which the metabolic excretions
92 g, tropical reefs will experience diminished trophic interactions, particularly herbivory and inverti
100 976 to 2016) in the habitat (delta(13)C) and trophic level (delta(15)N) of five important Southern Oc
101 ominated diphenyl ether congeners, in higher trophic level (TL) organisms are expected to be strongly
104 imately, projections of end of century upper trophic level biomass change are altered by 50%-80% acro
107 ting lowered metabolic functioning of higher trophic level nematodes and decreased soil food web stab
109 on a higher proportion of marine and higher trophic level prey, (2) they have higher energy requirem
110 The positive effects of biodiversity on one trophic level were not counteracted by the negative effe
111 in the log-concentration of a pollutant per trophic level) have been extensively assessed for the so
112 d host characteristics, such as sociality or trophic level, but ID MMEs did occur more frequently in
113 5% accuracy onto major niche axes, including trophic level, dietary resource type and finer-scale var
114 key life-history characteristics (sociality, trophic level, habitat breadth) and environmental variab
122 These data provide new insight into upper-trophic-level processes constrained from the geological
123 future Arctic Ocean that can support higher trophic-level production and additional carbon export.
124 interaction is enhanced if species at upper trophic levels (e.g. top predators) are more cold-adapte
125 haracteristics of species representing lower trophic levels (e.g., fish communities) to build flow-ec
127 ading to more pronounced decreases at higher trophic levels (nematodes) than at lower trophic levels
130 ntration pathway (RCP8.5), while BRT between trophic levels 2 and 4 is projected to decrease from 2.7
132 ous examination of organisms across multiple trophic levels and domains of life, providing critical i
136 e assessed abundances of soil fauna in lower trophic levels and indirect impacts on leaf-litter decom
138 the relative timing of spring events across trophic levels and mismatches in the phenology of intera
140 ing the potential for indirect effects among trophic levels and the relationship between arthropod di
141 ids more than parasitoids even though higher trophic levels are generally predicted to be more affect
142 hange trends in NPP and the biomass of upper trophic levels are strongly affected by modifying assump
143 interactions requires that species at lower trophic levels be somewhat maladapted to their ambient t
144 suggest that predators may facilitate lower trophic levels by indirectly reducing competition and re
145 l selection pressures and transcend multiple trophic levels can improve our understanding of plant me
147 te warming can restructure lake food webs if trophic levels differ in their thermal responses, but ev
149 ed effects of N and P enrichment on multiple trophic levels in soil food webs have not been studied i
151 e effects of nutrient enrichment on multiple trophic levels of soil food webs, and highlight that soi
154 Loss of biodiversity from lower to upper trophic levels reduces overall productivity and stabilit
155 ld-adaptation should constrain the number of trophic levels that can be supported in a given thermal
156 last water (BW) assemblages across different trophic levels was characterized over a 21 day cross-lat
158 ciency (the fraction of production passed up trophic levels) and primary production can account for t
159 functional (size structure, effects on lower trophic levels), community (zooplankton composition, abu
160 neralists during assembly, realistic maximum trophic levels, and increased nestedness with mutualisti
161 spond to environmental factors, affect other trophic levels, and influence ecosystem properties and t
164 Other FGs varied in their responses among trophic levels, ecoregions, and in their sensitivity to
166 Lower NPP would subsequently affect multiple trophic levels, including shallow benthic filter-feeding
167 arthropods consume non-prey foods from lower trophic levels, little is known about what drives the sh
168 arine ectotherms also vary among species and trophic levels, making their trophic interactions more p
169 uction is changing at different rates across trophic levels, potentially resulting in asynchrony betw
170 nt genotypic diversity effects differ across trophic levels, taxonomic groups and ecosystem functions
171 lted in changes in relative abundance across trophic levels, with the direction of change depending o
172 s to how long-term warming can favour higher trophic levels, with the potential to strengthen top-dow
192 nce of expected predator-prey relationships, trophic linkages, and seasonal shifts across all domains
198 ary in their propensity to biomagnify, their trophic magnification factors are all generally greater
203 of a change in the impact of climate-induced trophic mismatch, and evidence that shags are tracking l
206 in fluctuating environments can give rise to trophic mismatches governing the emergent effects of glo
209 t quantify the structure and dynamics of the trophic network using ecosystem energetics to data from
211 or roles as consumers and decomposers in the trophic networks of Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater
215 irements interact to determine an organism's trophic niche in the context of one of the largest globa
216 red prairie), and to quantify changes in the trophic niche of a widespread generalist ant species acr
220 of two hypotheses that explain variation in trophic niche-the niche variation hypothesis which empha
223 ut the extent to which animal traits predict trophic niches and associated ecological processes is un
224 xperiments were used to estimate fundamental trophic niches and molecular methods to estimate realise
225 But the capacity for species to alter their trophic niches in response to global change, and the way
230 Furthermore, neither predator biomass nor trophic position (via stable isotope analysis) increased
231 ratios (delta(15)N) were used as proxies for trophic position and carbon isotope ratios (delta(13)C)
232 nd within-individual effects of body size on trophic position and resource use change strongly over t
240 riment, in which individuals occupied higher trophic positions in plots with higher wolf spider densi
244 archaeology, and forensic science to explore trophic relationships and provenances of organisms and m
245 n the heart, we identified key intercellular trophic relationships and shifts in cellular communicati
247 eful tool to reconstruct diets, characterize trophic relationships, and assess spatiotemporal variati
248 a(13)C indicate that the predictive power of trophic relationships, and traditional dietary ecologica
250 for this to occur, there must be sufficient trophic resources to support larger populations of these
251 ate change due to decreases in their primary trophic resources, caused by bottom-up forcing, secondar
253 ur results provide mechanistic evidence that trophic rewilding has rapidly revived a key ecosystem fu
254 ive species-and that one decade of concerted trophic rewilding restored this invasion to pre-war base
255 macrophages play a previously unappreciated trophic role in maintaining choroidal vasculature and RP
257 which mediate cell-to-cell inflammatory and trophic signaling, are thought be viable therapeutic tar
258 ands activate RET tyrosine kinase and afford trophic signals irrespective of GFRalpha1 coexpression.
259 ent and divergent adaptations, and the multi-trophic significance of defensive traits; therefore the
260 indicate that the delta(15) N offset between trophic-source AAs (Delta(15) N(trophic-source) ) may pr
261 fset between trophic-source AAs (Delta(15) N(trophic-source) ) may provide an index of the extent of
263 ts on taxa than changes in fish predation or trophic state mediated through primary productivity.
264 by up to 2 degrees C, rather than changes in trophic state or fishing effort, have restructured the p
267 ngs demonstrate that taxonomic identity, not trophic status or body size, is the best baseline from w
276 able equilibrium in a complex ecosystem with trophic structure can become unstable with the introduct
277 quantity and evenness of rainfall modulates trophic structure in 210 natural freshwater microcosms (
278 ected impacts climate change can have on the trophic structure of communities, which can lead to sign
279 and the established importance of bottom-up trophic structuring in deep-sea ecosystems, we hypothesi
282 ly to be important for local food webs, as a trophic subsidy to distant habitats and for inshore carb
284 ial to better predict both MeHg exposure and trophic supply to white sharks, and effectively protect
285 t to expand ISCs in vitro without additional trophic support and contribute to ISC maintenance in viv
286 key astrocytic functions in vitro, including trophic support of neurons, glutamate uptake, and phagoc
287 guidance and synaptic shaping or through the trophic support, neurotransmitter and ion homeostasis, c
289 egating mechanisms (temporal, behavioral and trophic) that could facilitate the coexistence of the tw
290 ic shifts, individuals showed variability in trophic traits as big as the variability estimated betwe
293 we find that temperature-driven increases in trophic transfer efficiency (the fraction of production
294 iomass flows in coastal marine food web: the trophic transfer efficiency (TTE) and the biomass reside
296 species, we provide global estimates of two trophic transfer parameters which determine biomass flow
298 our knowledge, we were the first to include trophic variability in predicting biomagnification in Ar
300 continued concern for PFAS exposure of high trophic wildlife is still warranted, even in the norther