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Preprints

Filtering by Subject: Life Sciences

Missing the mammals for the trees: comparative biogeography of southern Appalachian sky island biodiversity

Kimberly July Cook, David Webster, Juliet Stowe, et al.

Published: 2026-03-20
Subjects: Life Sciences

Sky islands are patches of relic ecosystems on mountaintops, often forest types, that were previously connected in the geological past and are now patchily distributed. Whether a particular sky island forest serves as an umbrella for conserving sky island fauna with a similar patchy distribution is an open question. To address this, we systematically delineate sky islands and identify [...]

Towards a better understanding of adaptation: Problem description, partial solutions, and recommendations

Pim Edelaar, Niels J Dingemanse, Samantha C. Patrick, et al.

Published: 2026-03-20
Subjects: Animal Experimentation and Research, Animal Studies, Behavior and Ethology, Biodiversity, Developmental Biology, Evolution, Human Ecology, Integrative Biology, Life Sciences, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Other Genetics and Genomics, Other Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration, Population Biology, Science and Technology Studies

This paper is the product of an international workshop aiming to make progress in our general understanding of adaptation. We met from 5-7 February 2025 in Hannover (Germany), funded by the foundation “Volkswagen Stiftung”. For our group of theoretical and empirical biologists, social scientists, and philosophers of science we set up a program to facilitate communication and collaboration between [...]

(R)evolution Stings Back: Rethinking Strategies for Conserving Local Biodiversity of the Western Honey Bee (Apis mellifera)

Michał Robert Kolasa, Bartłomiej Molasy, Andrzej Oleksa

Published: 2026-03-19
Subjects: Life Sciences

The western honey bee (Apis mellifera) occupies an unusual position between domesticated livestock and wild organisms, creating persistent ambiguity in conservation policy. Most current conservation programmes prioritise controlled breeding, phenotypic stability, and lineage integrity, implicitly treating honey bees as populations dependent on continuous human management. While effective at [...]

iDeer: A decision-support tool for managing deer alongside woodland creation

Amy Gresham, Matthew Grainger, Matt Guy, et al.

Published: 2026-03-19
Subjects: Behavior and Ethology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Forest Management, Life Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

Increasing deer (Cervidae) densities driven by land-use change and climate warming represent a growing challenge to the establishment and management of woodlands across temperate biomes. Targeting deer management is challenging without spatially explicit information on potential impact risks under alternative management scenarios. Here we present the iDeer Tool [...]

Permissible Spite: Kin Selection, Demography, and the Inverse Hamiltonian Equation

Olga Semenova

Published: 2026-03-19
Subjects: Biology, Life Sciences, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Systems Biology

This article revisits Hamilton’s rule by proposing an inverted formulation to evaluate the evolutionary permissibility of spiteful behavior within kin-based populations. We formalize a reverse Hamiltonian equation and apply replicator dynamics to investigate the demographic and genetic conditions under which within group aggression may become evolutionarily stable. The model shows that in [...]

Reintroducing a nationally extinct predator, the forest caterpillar hunter (Calosoma sycophanta), for biocontrol of the invasive oak processionary (Thaumetopoea processionea) in Britain: considerations, benefits and risks

Kyle Alexander Miller, Jordan Patrick Cuff, Katiana Saleiko, et al.

Published: 2026-03-18
Subjects: Life Sciences

1. Controlling invasive species remains one of the greatest challenges of the 21st century. Sustainably managing invasive pests like the oak processionary moth (Thaumetopoea processionea; OPM), which lacks natural enemies in Britain, may require the introduction, or reintroduction, of suitable biocontrol agents. 2. The forest caterpillar hunter (Calosoma sycophanta; FCH) is thought to have been [...]

Historical mating systems and the origin of sexual ornam

Andrew Crompton

Published: 2026-03-18
Subjects: Life Sciences

Ornamental traits are commonly interpreted as products of runaway sexual selection or costly signals of male quality, but many ornamental traits appear to be functionally redundant, and, especially in birds, multiple ornaments coexist without clear links to condition or survival. This new proposal explains the evolution of ornament through sexual selection. based on looking for historic [...]

The Finite Element method to aid modelling of complex ecological systems

Klementyna A. Gawecka, James M. Bullock

Published: 2026-03-18
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Predicting how biodiversity responds to environmental change and management interventions remains a major challenge in ecology. Ecological systems are shaped by the interplay of demographic processes, species interactions, dispersal, and spatial heterogeneity across landscapes. Yet, many existing modelling approaches face a trade-off between spatial and ecological complexity, which limits their [...]

The scent of survival in a warming world: how monoterpenes drive thermal adaptation in thyme

Andreas Havbro Faber, John D Thompson, Perrine Gauthier, et al.

Published: 2026-03-18
Subjects: Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Evolution, Life Sciences, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Other Plant Sciences, Physiology, Plant Biology, Plant Sciences, Population Biology

1 Monoterpenes are key plant secondary metabolites with well known defensive and ecological functions, yet their role in abiotic stress tolerance remains poorly understood. In many Mediterranean plants, monoterpene composition varies markedly within and among species and is associated with climatic gradients, suggesting that these compounds may mediate plant responses to extreme heat. 2 We [...]

Adaptive strategies for biodiversity monitoring integrating Indigenous ecological calendars and community science data

Orlando Acevedo-Charry, Gloria Amparo Rivera Velasco, Walter Gabriel (Siorú) Estrada, et al.

Published: 2026-03-18
Subjects: Life Sciences

Integrating Indigenous and Western ecological knowledge can strengthen understanding of phenological patterns, yet this integration is often constrained by epistemological differences, power asymmetries, and histories of exclusion. We evaluated the potential of the Two-Eye Seeing guiding principle, which integrates the strengths of both knowledge systems, in ongoing biocultural conservation [...]

Flexibility training does not increase behavioral flexibility of Florida scrub-jays

Kelsey McCune, Sahas Barve

Published: 2026-03-18
Subjects: Behavior and Ethology, Biology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Human modifications of environments are expanding, causing global changes that other species must adjust to or suffer from. Behavioral flexibility (hereafter 'flexibility') could be key to coping with rapid change. Behavioral research can contribute to conservation by determining which behaviors can predict the ability to adjust to human modified environments and whether these can be manipulated. [...]

Habitat disturbance interacts with Bd infection to shape the skin bacterial communities of an Amazonian frog

Lia Schlippe Justicia, Susana Ferreira, Franz Hoelzl, et al.

Published: 2026-03-17
Subjects: Life Sciences

Amphibians are the most threatened vertebrate class globally, with habitat alteration and the fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) representing two major and often co-occurring drivers of decline. However, how these stressors interact to shape host-microbiome-pathogen dynamics remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated whether variation in anthropogenic habitat disturbance, [...]

Calendario ecológico sobre las aves desde la cosmovisión Pamiwã (Cubeo) en el departamento del Vaupés, Amazonía colombiana

Gloria Amparo Rivera Velasco, Walter Gabriel (Siorú) Estrada, Sebastian Guerrero Pelaez, et al.

Published: 2026-03-17
Subjects: Life Sciences

Los calendarios ecológicos son marcos ecoculturales que vinculan escalas temporales y espaciales con el uso, el manejo y la comprensión del entorno. A partir de diálogos de saberes con las comunidades indígenas Pamiwã (familia lingüística Tukano oriental) principalmente entre 2016 y 2021, presentamos un calendario ecológico que vincula la estacionalidad de la diversidad ornitológica en Mitú, [...]

Guidelines and best practices for the scientific use of global iNaturalist data

Corey T Callaghan, Caitlin J Campbell, Jane Widness, et al.

Published: 2026-03-16
Subjects: Life Sciences

Participatory science platforms are undoubtedly changing how biodiversity research is being conducted. Among these, iNaturalist has emerged as the largest and most widely used global infrastructure for biodiversity observation data, generating millions of new records each year and contributing substantially to global biodiversity repositories such as GBIF. As a result, iNaturalist data are [...]

Heterogeneity: Meaning and Measurement, Causes and Consequences

Zhanshan (Sam) Ma, Aaron M Ellison

Published: 2026-03-16
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Heterogeneity—the variation within and among collectives whose constituent entities interact and integrate into larger, functioning wholes, distinguished fundamentally from diversity as mere variation within non-interacting populations—has emerged as a central organizing principle across ecology and its allied fields. Yet the term remains ambiguously defined, often conflated with diversity [...]

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