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Preprints

There are 3098 Preprints listed.

Range-wide pangenomics reveals vulnerability and adaptation in a sedentary bird

Jong Yoon Jeon, Natalie M. Allen, Audrey J. Heckel, et al.

Published: 2026-03-31
Subjects: Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Genetics and Genomics

Structural genetic variants are known to underlie evolutionary adaptations, but have never been evaluated across the entire geographic range of a species. We constructed the first range-wide pangenome to evaluate how such variants may influence conservation efforts of the Montezuma quail (Cyrtonyx montezumae). Profiles of local adaptation, population structure, and genomic diversity all support a [...]

Climate warming reduces seed mass in European beech through altered resource dynamics and drought

Michał Bogdziewicz, Cherine C. Jantzen, Jakub Szymkowiak, et al.

Published: 2026-03-31
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Seed mass is a key life-history trait that influences dispersal, seedling establishment, and plant fitness, yet its long-term response to climate change remains poorly understood. We used two long-term datasets of European beech (\textit{Fagus sylvatica}) from the United Kingdom and the Netherlands (1976-2024) to test whether seed mass has changed over time and whether any decline can be [...]

Replicards: Teaching and simulating evolution with a card-based experiment

Elia Mascolo, Yseult Héjja-Brichard

Published: 2026-03-31
Subjects: Education, Life Sciences

The teaching of biological evolution in high schools is often reduced to an account of the history of evolutionary thought. As a result, students assimilate evolutionism more as a philosophical current of thought led by distinguished thinkers than as a fruitful area of scientific research. Often, mere verbal exposition is not enough for students to truly understand evolutionary phenomena, such as [...]

Will Climate Change Affect the Sustainability of Krill Fishing? A Simulation Study.

Klaus Stiefel, Beth Polidoro, Ritu M. Singh

Published: 2026-03-31
Subjects: Marine Biology, Population Biology, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

In the Southern Ocean, Antarctic krill form the base of the food web, and are the primary food source for a wide range of species, including whales, penguins and fish. Krill also comprises the largest fishery resource in Antarctica, but are increasingly thought to be impacted by changing environmental conditions associated with climate change. In order to explore potential synergistic impacts of [...]

A framework for predicting the effects of climate warming on arthropod disease vectors

Priyanga Amarasekare, Guilherme Casas Goncalves

Published: 2026-03-31
Subjects: Life Sciences

Predicting the effects of climate warming on vector-borne disease transmission is a crucial research priority. Predictions that can reliably inform policy need to be based on vector biology, but models that incorporate biological realism are often difficult to test with the limited amount of information available for most disease vectors. Here we present a framework for predicting warming effects [...]

Trophic niche structure of invertebrate-eating bats and birds in West African rice agroecosystems revealed by DNA metabarcoding

Tiago Morais Gonçalves, Patrícia Pereira Chaves, Paula Lopes, et al.

Published: 2026-03-30
Subjects: Biodiversity, Biology, Life Sciences

Knowledge of animal community diets is essential for understanding ecosystem functioning. Bats and birds are important groups of invertebrate predators, managing their populations. However, the diets of West African species and the mechanisms shaping them remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated these mechanisms in agricultural landscapes of Guinea-Bissau using metabarcoding and [...]

Archilestes californicus McLachlan: a new damselfly for coastal British Columbia (Odonata: Lestidae) with notes on the species’ expansion in the Pacific Northwest

Steven Kenneth Esau, Paul Simonin, Robert Cannings

Published: 2026-03-30
Subjects: Entomology

We observed Archilestes californicus McLachlan (California Spreadwing), a damselfly in the family Lestidae, for the first time in south coastal British Columbia. Other records of the species in the Pacific Northwest document a gradual northward range expansion over the last twenty years. In light of this history, Archilestes californicus is expected to spread more widely in southern British [...]

Open Code in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology: An Evidence-Based Appraisal by SORTEE

Edward Richard Ivimey-Cook, Kevin R Bairos-Novak, Daniel Morillo, et al.

Published: 2026-03-30
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

1. Open Code is the practice of publicly archiving analysis or software code in a manner that follows FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) guiding principles. This allows for increased transparency of data processing and analysis, and facilitates computational reproducibility of research results. 2. The empirical evidence for the general benefits of Open Code mostly focuses on [...]

Pre-registration and Registered Reports in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology: An Evidence-Based Appraisal by SORTEE

Joel L Pick, Elina Takola, Kevin R Bairos-Novak, et al.

Published: 2026-03-30
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

1. A pre-registration is a time-stamped, read-only research plan that is written prior to data collection and analysis. This practice aims to increase transparency and reduce questionable research practices (QRPs) such as p-hacking and HARKing. Registered Reports are an article format with two stage peer review, that integrates Pre-registration and peer review and aims to additionally reduce [...]

Deep learning scans for selective sweeps using RAiSD-AI

Nikolaos Alachiotis, Prodromos Papadopoulos, Hanqing Zhao, et al.

Published: 2026-03-30
Subjects: Life Sciences

Recent advances in method and software development for selective sweep detection focus on using deep learning to improve detection performance. However, the adoption of deep learning in real-world analyses is slow, hindered by the lack of reusable tools that alleviate the interdisciplinary friction of integrating such methods for practical deployment. This chapter walks the reader through the [...]

Northern Sierra Historical Range of Variability and Current Landscape Departure

Kevin McGarigal, Becky Estes, Scott Conway, et al.

Published: 2026-03-30
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Forest Biology, Forest Management, Forest Sciences, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

This report describes modeling historical range of variability (HRV) and current departure for landscapes within the Northern Sierra ecoregion in California and Nevada. We discuss the need for this study with respect to the historical and contemporary context of the ecoregion, including background on the natural range of variability concept and the use of simulation modeling to quantify it. For [...]

Standardizing turn-taking metrics: A methodological toolkit for data annotation across species and taxa

Jolinde Vlaeyen, Filipa Abreu, Kolff Kayla, et al.

Published: 2026-03-27
Subjects: Animal Studies, Communication, Social and Behavioral Sciences

Conversational turn-taking, the cooperative reciprocal exchange of short and flexible turns, is fundamental for communication and social coordination. Initially thought to be uniquely human, recent research showed some evidence of cooperative turn-taking also in other animal species. However, systematic evaluations and comparisons of turn-taking skills within and across species pose considerable [...]

The collapse of environmental predictability erodes reproductive success in a Tropical seabird

Santiago Ortega, Cristina Rodriguez, Ayumi Mizuno, et al.

Published: 2026-03-27
Subjects: Life Sciences

Climate change can alter not only when seasonal events occur on average, but also how predictable they are from year to year. Many long-lived seabirds show a paradox: breeding dates remain stable even as populations decline. Using two decades of data from Blue-footed Boobies (Sula nebouxii), we tested whether loss of environmental predictability could reduce reproductive success even when mean [...]

Historical subtidal regime shifts echoed in adjacent intertidal community

Julien Beaulieu, Nicole Knight, Amelia Hesketh, et al.

Published: 2026-03-27
Subjects: Life Sciences

Anthropogenic stressors can trigger regime shifts, causing ecosystems to reorganize into new states. Moreover, there is growing evidence of the importance of fluxes (e.g., energy, matter and nutrients) in linking adjacent systems, suggesting that regime shifts within one system may extend to neighbouring systems through cross-ecosystem interactions. However, empirical evidence supporting this [...]

On Information in Evolutionary Processes

Enrico M Bucci

Published: 2026-03-26
Subjects: Evolution, Population Biology

Since the first attempts to introduce an information-theoretical formalism into the description of evolutionary processes, several authors have argued that such approaches are inappropriate because biological evolution does not unfold in a predefined space of possibilities. To properly address that objection, we need to separate the semantics of the emergence of biological functions from the [...]

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