Skip to main content

Preprints

Filtering by Subject: Life Sciences

Sample size shapes metabarcoding-driven biodiversity assessments across body sizes in soil

Lu Wang, April Lyn Leonar, Simone Cesarz, et al.

Published: 2026-04-14
Subjects: Biodiversity, Bioinformatics, Life Sciences

Understanding how sample size influences biodiversity detection across taxonomic groups differing in body size is critical for designing robust and cost-efficient metabarcoding studies of soil eukaryotes. Using a soil mass gradient (0.25-32 g) combined with a universal 18S rRNA metabarcoding approach, we quantified how sample mass shapes diversity estimates across eukaryotic taxa. Diversity [...]

Silver spoon effect: Natal noise exposition is associated with telomere dynamics in adult birds

Yuheng Sun, Terry Burke, Julia Schroeder, et al.

Published: 2026-04-14
Subjects: Animal Sciences, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Ornithology

Anthropogenic noise disturbance on wildlife is of growing concern. Environmental noise exposure during incubation can negatively impact fitness in wild birds. Here, we hypothesised that chronic noise introduces stress through oxidative damage to embryos, reflected in short-term fitness reduction and long-term physiological changes. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the effects of chronic [...]

Older forests recover faster: leaf litter arthropods reveal post-perturbation recolonization dynamics

Arianna Tartara, Karla Neira Salamea, Florian Frenzel, et al.

Published: 2026-04-14
Subjects: Life Sciences

Understanding how ecological communities recover from disturbance is central to predicting ecosystem resilience, particularly in tropical forests where biodiversity and ecosystem functioning are tightly linked. Such landscapes are dominated by secondary forests that have experienced, and continue to experience, disturbances of varying intensity. Leaf litter arthropods play a crucial role in [...]

The Evolution of Interdependent Cell Cycles During the Transition to Multicellularity

Homa Papoli Yazdi, Mohammad A. Siddiq, Hwei-Yen Chen, et al.

Published: 2026-04-13
Subjects: Biology, Cell and Developmental Biology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

In the evolution of complex multicellular organisms, cells that were once autonomous became obligately dependent on one another for survival and reproduction. Despite its importance, the process by which autonomous cellular machinery was restructured into obligately interdependent networks is poorly understood. Addressing this gap requires a framework that clearly categorizes the different levels [...]

Anti-obesity therapeutics potential of plant genetic resources of Bangladesh and their conservation at Bangladesh Agricultural University Botanical Garden

A K M Golam Sarwar, Md Riyadh Arefin, M Farhan Ishmam, et al.

Published: 2026-04-13
Subjects: Life Sciences

Obesity, a global health issue affecting 650 million people, leads to chronic diseases and health impairments. Anti-obesity drugs are expensive and may cause side effects, raising significant concerns. One hundred eighty-eight medicinal plant species from 157 genera and 62 families in Bangladesh exhibit anti-obesity activity. Fabaceae (syn. Leguminosae) is the largest family, consisting of 25 [...]

An energetic unification of ecological theory

Serguei Saavedra

Published: 2026-04-10
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Ecological communities can persist for long periods despite strong competition and environmental variability, yet they can also reorganize or collapse abruptly after seemingly modest change. Explaining persistence, diversity, and collapse has produced several major traditions in ecology, including species-interaction models, consumer--resource theory, coexistence theory, feasibility analysis, and [...]

Microplastics and forest fungi: A review and call for comprehensive research

Toktam Farzaneh, Christian Laforsch, Claus Bässler

Published: 2026-04-10
Subjects: Life Sciences

Fungi are the main drivers of the global carbon and nutrient cycle and act as ecosystem engineers in forest ecosystems by regulating primary production and decomposition. Moreover, fungi are among the most diverse organisms in forest ecosystems and affect almost all forest microhabitats, from the canopy to the soil. In contrast to aquatic and agricultural ecosystems, forest ecosystems have [...]

When does sampling uncertainty matter in matrix population models? Evidence from published projection matrices

Owen Russell Jones, Emily Simmonds

Published: 2026-04-09
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Population Biology

1. The collation of thousands of population projection matrices in the COM(P)ADRE Matrix Databases has enabled large-scale comparative analyses in ecology, evolution, and demography. A persistent challenge is that transition rates are estimated from finite samples, yet the resulting sampling uncertainty is rarely reported and typically ignored in downstream analyses. Although sampling uncertainty [...]

Why are embodied social signals concentrated towards the rostral region? — The rostrum concentration hypothesis

Shun Satoh, Hiroshi Matsui

Published: 2026-04-09
Subjects: Behavior and Ethology, Biological Psychology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Psychology, Social and Behavioral Sciences

Although frequently embodied, the relationship of animal social communication with body layout has rarely been investigated from a unified cognitive perspective. Across animal taxa, socially relevant signals, ranging from facial expressions and gaze to colouration and morphology, are strikingly concentrated towards the anterior region of the body. Here, we propose the Rostrum Concentration [...]

MCT-05: Un marco de evaluación para la planificación de la restauración fluvial. Validación con 9 años de datos de seguimiento de un río mediterráneo.

Víctor Cristóbal Bernal Díaz

Published: 2026-04-08
Subjects: Life Sciences

Long-term monitoring of Mediterranean rivers often reveals contrasting ecological trajectories even where restoration interventions are similar. These long-term datasets provide limited guidance for interpreting whether observed changes reflect structural ecological condition or temporal variability of indicators. Using nine years of monitoring data from 21 stations in the Ripoll River (NE [...]

The signal of admixture can decay rapidly when using clustering-based methods

Josia Shemuel, Sonal Singhal, Craig Moritz, et al.

Published: 2026-04-08
Subjects: Genetics and Genomics, Life Sciences, Molecular Genetics

Gene flow shapes evolutionary trajectories by introducing novel alleles, facilitating or retarding adaptation, or eroding divergence among populations. Studies commonly infer gene flow through estimates of genetic admixture from methods that cluster individuals by allele-frequency similarity. However, the ability of these methods to reliably detect historical admixture remains poorly understood, [...]

What is the human germline mutation rate? methodological innovations, challenges, and evolutionary implications

Cecilia Padilla-Iglesias, Paco Majic

Published: 2026-04-08
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Evolution, Genetics, Genetics and Genomics, Life Sciences

Germline mutations are the ultimate source of heritable genetic variation, driving evolution, enabling adaptation, and underlying disease. Despite their fundamental importance, key questions remain unanswered: How frequently do germline mutations arise? Do mutation rates vary systematically across individuals, populations, and local genomic context? And what determines whether a mutation arising [...]

Unraveling contaminant effects on biodiversity across scales: the macroecotoxicology perspective

Gabriel M. Moulatlet, Mariana Vellosa Capparelli, Daniela Truchet, et al.

Published: 2026-04-08
Subjects: Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Pharmacology, Toxicology and Environmental Health

With the spread of contaminants across the globe, ecosystems are increasingly exposed to pollutants at varying levels of biological organization. The effects of a wide range of contaminants on individuals have been extensively studied within the discipline of ecotoxicology, but understanding the generality of species’ responses across taxa and ecosystems remains a major challenge. This is because [...]

Harry Potter shows mirror to dire wolf de-extinction: perils of chasing ghosts of species’ past

Nishant Kumar

Published: 2026-04-08
Subjects: Animal Sciences, Biology, Genetics and Genomics, Life Sciences, Other Life Sciences

Abstract 1. Conservation faces a paradox. As urban expansion and industrial-scale agriculture erode relational values between people and nature, a privileged minority dictates global biodiversity narratives. This shift is reinforced by media and technological interventions that frequently override lived, local experiences. For instance, gene editing tools like CRISPR are incorporated for [...]

Diversity and co-occurrence patterns of wood inhabiting insects along a tropical forest regeneration gradient

Nina Grella, Ana Falconí-López, David A. Donoso, et al.

Published: 2026-04-07
Subjects: Biodiversity, Biology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Entomology, Life Sciences

More than 90% of global carbon released during dead wood decomposition comes from the tropics, where insects contribute significantly to this process, especially in lowland rainforests. Understanding community assembly of dead wood-inhabiting insects is therefore important. We investigated diversity patterns between habitats and host trees, and co-occurrence of wood-inhabiting ants, termites, and [...]

search

You can search by:

  • Title
  • Keywords
  • Author Name
  • Author Affiliation