Predator control of marine communities increases with temperature across 115 degrees of latitude
出版年份 2022 全文链接
标题
Predator control of marine communities increases with temperature across 115 degrees of latitude
作者
关键词
-
出版物
SCIENCE
Volume 376, Issue 6598, Pages 1215-1219
出版商
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
发表日期
2022-06-10
DOI
10.1126/science.abc4916
参考文献
相关参考文献
注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。- Stronger predation intensity and impact on prey communities in the tropics
- (2021) Amy L. Freestone et al. ECOLOGY
- Asymmetry of marine invasions across tropical oceans
- (2021) Mark E. Torchin et al. ECOLOGY
- Geographic variation of UV stress tolerance in red seaweeds does not scale with latitude along the SE Pacific coast
- (2020) Karina Véliz et al. JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
- Pelagic fish predation is stronger at temperate latitudes than near the equator
- (2020) Marius Roesti et al. Nature Communications
- Calcareous defence structures of prey mediate the effects of predation and biotic resistance towards the tropics
- (2020) Gustavo M. Dias et al. DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS
- Seed predation increases from the Arctic to the Equator and from high to low elevations
- (2019) A. L. Hargreaves et al. Science Advances
- Can marine reserves restore lost ecosystem functioning? A global synthesis
- (2019) Brian S. Cheng et al. ECOLOGY
- Variation in consumer pressure along 2500 km in a major upwelling system: crab predators are more important at higher latitudes
- (2019) Catalina A. Musrri et al. MARINE BIOLOGY
- Predation shapes invertebrate diversity in tropical but not temperate seagrass communities
- (2019) Amy L. Freestone et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
- Global pattern of nest predation is disrupted by climate change in shorebirds
- (2018) Vojtěch Kubelka et al. SCIENCE
- Consumption pressure in coastal marine environments decreases with latitude and in artificial vs. natural habitats
- (2017) JR Rodemann et al. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
- Higher predation risk for insect prey at low latitudes and elevations
- (2017) Tomas Roslin et al. SCIENCE
- Consumption pressure in coastal marine environments decreases with latitude and in artificial vs. natural habitats
- (2017) JR Rodemann et al. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
- The biotic resistance role of fish predation in fouling communities
- (2016) Laura Pioli Kremer et al. BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
- Is the notion that species interactions are stronger and more specialized in the tropics a zombie idea?
- (2016) Angela T. Moles et al. BIOTROPICA
- Latitudinal and depth gradients in marine predation pressure
- (2016) Elizabeth M. Harper et al. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Nonrandom community assembly and high temporal turnover promote regional coexistence in tropics but not temperate zone
- (2015) Amy L. Freestone et al. ECOLOGY
- fitdistrplus: AnRPackage for Fitting Distributions
- (2015) Marie Laure Delignette-Muller et al. Journal of Statistical Software
- Squidpops: A Simple Tool to Crowdsource a Global Map of Marine Predation Intensity
- (2015) J. Emmett Duffy et al. PLoS One
- Stronger biotic resistance in tropics relative to temperate zone: effects of predation on marine invasion dynamics
- (2013) Amy L. Freestone et al. ECOLOGY
- Community ecology in a warming world: The influence of temperature on interspecific interactions in marine systems
- (2011) Rebecca L. Kordas et al. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY
- Trophic Downgrading of Planet Earth
- (2011) James A. Estes et al. SCIENCE
- Stronger predation in the tropics shapes species richness patterns in marine communities
- (2010) Amy L. Freestone et al. ECOLOGY
- Decreasing resilience of kelp beds along a latitudinal temperature gradient: potential implications for a warmer future
- (2010) Thomas Wernberg et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Global patterns and predictors of marine biodiversity across taxa
- (2010) Derek P. Tittensor et al. NATURE
- Is There a Latitudinal Gradient in the Importance of Biotic Interactions?
- (2009) Douglas W. Schemske et al. Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics
Add your recorded webinar
Do you already have a recorded webinar? Grow your audience and get more views by easily listing your recording on Peeref.
Upload NowBecome a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get Started