Now showing items 1-4 of 4

    • Are we ready to track climate‐driven shifts in marine species across international boundaries? ‐ A global survey of scientific bottom trawl data 

      Maureaud, Aurore; Frelat, Romain; Pecuchet, Laurène Anne Marie; Shackell, Nancy; Merigot, Bastien; Pinsky, Malin L.; Emblemsvåg, Margrete; Amador, Kofi; Anderson, Sean C.; Arkhipkin, Alexander; Auber, Arnaud; Barri, Ica; Bell, Richard J.; Belmaker, Jonathan; Beukhof, Esther; Camara, Mohamed L.; Guevara-Carrasco, Renato; Choi, Junghwa; Christensen, Helle T.; Conner, Jason; Cubillos, Luis A.; Diadhiou, Hamet D.; Edelist, Dori; Ernst, Billy; Fairweather, Tracey P.; Fock, Heino O.; Friedland, Kevin D.; Garcia, Camilo B.; Gascuel, Didier; Gislason, Henrik; Goren, Menachem; Guitton, Jérôme; Jouffre, Didier; Hattab, Tarek; Hidalgo, Manuel; Kathena, Johannes N.; Knuckey, Ian; Kidé, Saïkou O.; Koen-Alonso, Mariano; Koopman, Matt; Kulik, Vladimir; León, Jacqueline Palacios; Levitt-Barmats, Ya’arit; Lindegren, Martin; Llope, Marcos; Massiot-Granier, Félix; Masski, Hicham; McLean, Matthew; Meissa, Beyah; Mérillet, Laurène; Mihneva, Vesselina; Nunoo, Francis K.E.; O'Driscoll, Richard; Petrova, Elitsa; Ramos, Jorge E.; Refes, Wahid; Román-Marcote, Esther; Siegstad, Helle; Sobrino, Ignacio; Sólmundsson, Jón; Sonin, Oren; Spies, Ingrid; Steingrund, Petur; Stephenson, Fabrice; Stern, Nir; Tserkova, Feriha; Tserpes, Georges; Tzanatos, Evangelos; van Rijn, Itai; van Zwieten, Paul A. M.; Vasilakopoulos, Paraskevas; Yepsen, Daniela V.; Ziegler, Philippe; Thorson, James T.; O'Leary, Cecilia A. (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2020-10-17)
      Marine biota are redistributing at a rapid pace in response to climate change and shifting seascapes. While changes in fish populations and community structure threaten the sustainability of fisheries, our capacity to adapt by tracking and projecting marine species remains a challenge due to data discontinuities in biological observations, lack of data availability, and mismatch between data and ...
    • Coastal habitats and their importance for the diversity of benthic communities: A species- and trait-based approach 

      Henseler, Christina; Nordström, Marie C.; Törnroos, Anna; Snickars, Martin; Pecuchet, Laurene; Lindegren, Martin; Bonsdorff, Erik (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-06-26)
      Coastal habitats are used by a great variety of organisms during some or all stages of their life cycle. When assessing the link between biological communities and their environment, most studies focus on environmental gradients, whereas the comparison between multiple habitats is rarely considered. Consequently, trait-based aspects of biodiversity in and between habitats have received little ...
    • Marine fish traits follow fast-slow continuum across oceans 

      Beukhof, Esther; Frelat, Romain; Pecuchet, Laurene; Maureaud, Aurore; Dencker, Tim Spaanheden; Sólmundsson, Jón; Punzón, Antonio; Primicerio, Raul; Hidalgo, Manuel; Möllmann, Christian; Lindegren, Martin (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-11-29)
      A fundamental challenge in ecology is to understand why species are found where they are and predict where they are likely to occur in the future. Trait-based approaches may provide such understanding, because it is the traits and adaptations of species that determine which environments they can inhabit. It is therefore important to identify key traits that determine species distributions and ...
    • Spatio-temporal dynamics of multi-trophic communities reveal ecosystem-wide functional reorganization 

      Pecuchet, Laurene; Lindegren, Martin; Kortsch, Susanne; Całkiewicz, Joanna; Jurgensone, Iveta; Margonski, Piotr; Otto, Saskia A.; Putnis, Ivars; Strāķe, Solvita; Nordström, Marie C. (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-11-13)
      Large‐scale alterations in marine ecosystems as a response to environmental and anthropogenic pressures have been documented worldwide. Yet, these are primarily investigated by assessing abundance fluctuations of a few dominant species, which inadequately reflect ecosystem‐wide changes. In addition, it is increasingly recognized that it is not species identity per se, but their traits that determine ...