Skip to main content

Preprints

There are 3445 Preprints listed.

Climate isolation and percolation as drivers of terrestrial vertebrate richness

Marcio Pie

Published: 2026-07-13
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Global biodiversity impact spillovers of national transportation systems

Venla Aurora Leppilampi, Janne Kotiaho, Stefan Baumeisteri, et al.

Published: 2026-07-13
Subjects: Biodiversity

Transportation systems cause well-documented local biodiversity impacts and substantial greenhouse gas emissions, yet the global biodiversity impacts embedded in their value chains remain poorly understood. Here, we quantify the life cycle biodiversity and carbon footprints of Finland’s national transportation system, covering traffic, transport infrastructure, and vehicle production and [...]

The warmer, the yellower? Colour patterns of fire salamanders across different scales in the face of rising temperatures

Carolin Dittrich, Kristin Rose Szydlik, Anni-Kaisa Karoliina Jokinen, et al.

Published: 2026-07-13
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Zoology

The unprecedented increase in global temperatures might lead to phenotypical changes in many species to account for increased thermoregulatory processes. This could be due to increased selection pressures on traits such as colouration or body size. Using specimens from the Natural History Museum in Vienna for a long-term series and recent data from an ongoing fire salamander monitoring programme [...]

Precipitation predictability shapes plant growth trajectories, climate sensitivity, and fitness pathways within and across generations

Katja Springer, Patrick S. Fitze, Lucrezia Laccetti, et al.

Published: 2026-07-13
Subjects: Life Sciences

Environmental predictability is increasingly altered under climate change, particularly through shifts in the temporal structure and autocorrelation of climatic variables. In plants, the interaction between precipitation predictability and temporal climatic variation can shape the magnitude, timing, and trajectory of growth, with cascading effects on phenological coordination, and ultimately on [...]

Marine subsidies, spatial heterogeneity, and territoriality drive trophic ecology in desert predators

Chloé Warret Rodrigues, Ingrid Wiesel, Christine M Drea, et al.

Published: 2026-07-10
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

1. Allochthonous (including marine) subsidies can have far-reaching effects on recipient ecosystems. By altering local resource availability, the combined effects of these subsidies and landscape heterogeneity can structure consumer diets, shape communities and influence ecosystem dynamics. 2. We examined how marine subsidies, landscape heterogeneity, and territoriality drive resource use in [...]

The roles of contrasting host types on the environmental abundance of Anaplasma phagocytophilum, an emerging zoonotic pathogen

William McLellan, Sara Gandy, Lucy Gilbert, et al.

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Life Sciences

Fundamental knowledge of the role of hosts in shaping vector-borne pathogen abundance is critical to understanding the ecology of these disease systems; yet the roles can be challenging to tease apart, especially for pathogens vectored by generalist feeders with multiple hosts. In this study, we aimed to quantify the relative contributions of hypothesised pathogen transmission hosts (deer and [...]

From Scalable Biodiversity Measurement to Credible Biodiversity Metrics

Douglas W Yu, Fabian Fassnacht, Tone Birkemoe, et al.

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Artificial Intelligence and Robotics, Biodiversity, Business, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment, Environmental Monitoring, Environmental Sciences, Environmental Studies, Life Sciences, Natural Resources and Conservation, Natural Resources Management and Policy, Other Economics, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Statistical Models, Sustainability, Technology and Innovation

Governments struggle to develop effective policies to counter the decline of species and ecosystems. An obstacle to command-and-control and incentive-based mechanisms is that biodiversity is costly to measure, creating an information asymmetry in which firms and governments are incentivised to withhold information on adverse impacts. Using a principal-agent model, we show that credible reporting [...]

Sniffing for fungi: Use of a conservation dog uncovers high regional truffle diversity

Heather A Dawson, Jonathan L. Frank, Carolyn Delevich, et al.

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Biodiversity, Biology, Botany, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology Life Sciences, Forest Biology, Forest Sciences, Plant Sciences, Research Methods in Life Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

Hypogeous aromatic fungi (‘truffles’) contribute significantly to overall fungal diversity but are difficult to find using traditional survey methods because they fruit underground, leading to under-documentation and a lack of understanding of truffle ecology. Truffles evolved to emit strong aromatic compounds to attract mycophagists for spore dispersal, a trait that culinary truffle harvesters [...]

Efficient Bayesian Estimation for Open Population Capture-Recapture Models Without Data Augmentation

Devin Johnson, Shelbie K. Ishimaru, Janelle J. Gardner

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Applied Statistics, Longitudinal Data Analysis and Time Series, Natural Resources and Conservation, Population Biology, Statistical Methodology, Statistical Models

1. Bayesian estimation of abundance with capture-recapture data has been dominated for nearly 20 years by the parameter-expansion data-augmentation (PX-DA) ap- proach. The PX-DA approach expands the parameter set to include the latent true states of the individuals. PX-DA allows straightforward coding of models in MCMC software such as JAGS (Just Another Gibbs Sampler) or nimble, however, this [...]

Dark fragmentation: daylighting hidden disconnections in river networks

Jingrui Sun, Damiano Baldan, Ellen Wohl, et al.

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

River fragmentation is a central driver of freshwater biodiversity loss, yet its true extent is often underestimated due to incomplete barrier inventories, static river maps, and simplified assumptions about barrier passability. We propose dark fragmentation as the hidden component of river-network disconnection arising from three interacting dimensions: inventory darkness caused by unmapped [...]

Mammal diversity survey in Dakatcha Woodland, Kenya: Results from a four-year camera trap survey (2019-2022)

Raphaël Nussbaumer, Améline Nussbaumer, Lennox Kirao, et al.

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Zoology

The Dakatcha Woodland is one of the largest formally unprotected coastal forests in the Northern Swahili Coastal Forests bioregion and faces severe threats from widespread deforestation. To develop a comprehensive mammal checklist for the area, we deployed 10 camera traps over four years (2019 –2022), totalling 122 deployments and 6,779 trap days. This survey identified 28 mammal species, [...]

A comprehensive dataset on plant-associated invertebrates and gardening activities, from 100 sites across five urban green space types in Zurich, Lugano, and Geneva, Switzerland

Sebastian Ruile, Arthur Knecht, Alessandra Knuser, et al.

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Life Sciences

This dataset describes plant-associated invertebrates, gardening activities, and habitat diversity across five urban green spaces (UGS) types in the cities of Zurich, Lugano, and Geneva, Switzerland. The UGS types, namely allotment lot, private garden, residential estate, park, and ruderal area, cover different purposes, ownership, and management regimes. While Zurich was the core study region, [...]

Threat intensification reshapes trait-response relationships in birds and mammals

Sarah Bull, Simone Blomberg, Rikki Gumbs, et al.

Published: 2026-07-09
Subjects: Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Predicting which species are most at risk of extinction, and by which threats, is central to effective biodiversity management (1). Trait-based frameworks, linking species traits to extinction risk, are increasingly used to predict global biodiversity trends, with applications from species-specific prioritisations (2) to estimations of global diversity loss (3). However, despite the strong [...]

Cetaceans of the Black and Azov Seas as Indicators of Habitat Quality via Stacked Species Distribution Models

Volodymyr Tytar, Leonid Fedorenko

Published: 2026-07-07
Subjects: Life Sciences

Habitat degradation and biodiversity loss in the Black and Azov Seas necessitate improved tools for spatially explicit conservation planning. We employed stacked species distribution modelling (SSDM) to assess habitat quality for the three resident cetacean species—the common dolphin (Delphinus delphis ponticus), the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus ponticus), and the harbour porpoise [...]

Timing isn’t everything: impacts of maximum abundance and duration of a seasonal resource on consumer fitness

Kirsty H. Macphie, Joel Pick, James Pearce-Higgins, et al.

Published: 2026-07-07
Subjects: Life Sciences

Phenological advances are among the most apparent biotic responses to warmer springs in mid- to high-latitude regions, with evidence that consumers are advancing less than the resources they rely on. Here, we extend the match/mismatch hypothesis to predict how the mean timing, maximum abundance and duration of the resource phenological distribution impacts on consumer fitness. Using data from 44 [...]

search

You can search by:

  • Title
  • Keywords
  • Author Name
  • Author Affiliation