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Preprints

There are 2975 Preprints listed.

Composite virulence: useful metric or conceptual trap?

Luis M. Silva, Tiago G. Zeferino

Published: 2026-02-20
Subjects: Animal Diseases, Animal Experimentation and Research, Animal Sciences, Biodiversity, Biology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Evolution, Immunity, Immunology and Infectious Disease, Immunology of Infectious Disease, Immunopathology, Life Sciences, Medical Microbiology, Microbiology, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Other Immunology and Infectious Disease, Parasitic Diseases, Parasitology, Pathogenic Microbiology, Plant Pathology, Research Methods in Life Sciences, Zoology

Virulence, the harm an infection causes to its host, is a cornerstone concept in ecology and evolution, yet it remains difficult to quantify because infection impact is multidimensional, dynamic, and context-dependent. Infections can reduce host performance through multiple, partially redundant routes (including mortality, fecundity loss, behavioural impairment, and physiological disruption), [...]

Anergiobiosis: a testable framework for microbial life under extreme power limitation

Paul Carini, Roland Hatzenpichler, Jennifer F Biddle

Published: 2026-02-20
Subjects: Biology, Life Sciences, Marine Biology, Microbiology

"Aeonophily" was recently suggested as a new category of extremophily for ultra-slow-growing subsurface microorganisms. This terminology conflates a physiological state with potential extremophilic specialization. We propose "anergiobiosis" to describe life without sufficient power to sustain cell division, separating this state from questions about specialization. Analogous to temperature [...]

A Framework for Questionable Research Practices in Ecological Modelling

Elliot Gould, Hannah S. Fraser, Bonnie Claire Wintle, et al.

Published: 2026-02-20
Subjects: Applied Statistics, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Natural Resources and Conservation, Water Resource Management

1. Questionable research practices (QRPs) bias the published literature towards apparently strong and conclusive results, resulting in low rates of replicability. Recent metaresearch reveals that ecology is not immune to the ‘reproducibility crisis’ seen in other disciplines, due to similar rates of QRPs and a lack of transparency in published research. However, metaresearch to date focuses on [...]

Roe Deer show an affinity for woodland and reluctance to cross roads

Benjamin Michael Marshall, Lucy Gilbert, John Boyle, et al.

Published: 2026-02-19
Subjects: Animal Sciences, Behavior and Ethology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology, Zoology

Animals use landscapes unequally and have differential responses to anthropogenic changes such as land cover modification. Predicting such responses can be challenging, requiring knowledge of animal movements. This knowledge is particularly valuable where human-animal interactions have implications for either's well-being. Large herbivores, with relatively high mobility, often come in contact [...]

Maternal swimming exercise training improves survival and the heritability of thermal tolerance and length in brown trout offspring

Luca Pettinau, Tytti-Maria Uurasmaa, Eila Seppänen, et al.

Published: 2026-02-19
Subjects: Life Sciences

Changing the narrative: encroached savannas are not forest

Catherine L Parr, Richard Bardgett, James M. Bullock, et al.

Published: 2026-02-19
Subjects: Life Sciences

1. Savannas are globally important ecosystems but are often misclassified as forests because they can support high tree cover, leading to misguided management. This misunderstanding arises because the presence of grasses, a key defining component of savannas, critical for their structure and functioning, is overlooked. 2. Fundamental tree-based misunderstandings affect the interpretation of [...]

Dwarka Forest: A respite through the cracks of the city's concrete

Nirjesh Gautam

Published: 2026-02-19
Subjects: Arts and Humanities, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Urban expansion has increasingly produced landscapes that fall outside conventional ecological and legal classifications, yet perform critical ecological and social functions. Dwarka Forest, located in southwest Delhi, represents one such landscape. Emerging through decades of spontaneous vegetation growth on land originally acquired for infrastructure development, the site has developed into a [...]

Chemical Ecology of Arachnids - Morphology, Behaviour, and Semiochemicals

Andreas Fischer, Kirk Hillier, Lise Roy, et al.

Published: 2026-02-17
Subjects: Animal Sciences, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Zoology

Arachnids represent a diverse and ecologically influential paraphyletic assemblage of chelicerate arthropods that has colonized virtually every terrestrial habitat. Arachnids contribute to ecosystems as predators, parasites and decomposers. Yet, the chemical mechanisms that allow arachnids to interact with the environment remain strikingly understudied relative to their taxonomic breadth. Much of [...]

Climate warming dampens masting-driven pulsed resources

Michał Bogdziewicz, Jessie Foest, Andrew Hacket-Pain, et al.

Published: 2026-02-17
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Pulsed resources arise when environmental forcing synchronizes biological responses. This synchrony generates episodic booms and busts that structure food webs. Mast seeding is a major example, yet climate warming is increasingly disrupting the synchrony that underpins these pulses. Importantly, the ecological consequences of masting depend on which tail is synchronized: spatially coherent seed [...]

Maximum performance, repeatability, and intraindividual variability of sprinting in common wall lizards (Podarcis muralis)

Madelyn Browning, Lindsey Mayor, Halle Kozak, et al.

Published: 2026-02-17
Subjects: Animal Sciences, Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology, Integrative Biology, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Zoology

The repeatability of functional traits like physiological maxima (maximum performance) measures the reliability of underlying measurements. However, best practices for analyzing maximal performance while accounting for within-individual variation are lacking. Here, we quantify the coefficient of variation and repeatability of maximum sprinting speed in common wall lizards (Podarcis muralis) from [...]

mrangr: An R package for mechanistic simulation of metacommunities

Katarzyna Markowska, Michał Wawrzynowicz, Lechosław Kuczyński

Published: 2026-02-17
Subjects: Life Sciences

1. Metacommunity theory unifies ecology by integrating local biotic interactions with regional dispersal and environmental filtering. However, testing theoretical predictions against empirical data remains challenging due to the difficulty of disentangling these processes in nature and the confounding effects of imperfect detection. 2. Here, we introduce mrangr, an R package designed for the [...]

Social organisation predicts lifespan in mammals

Owen Russell Jones, Kevin Healy, Julia A Jones

Published: 2026-02-17
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Evolution, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Population Biology

1. Recent comparative analyses have identified positive associations between social organisation and longevity in mammals, but independent replication with larger datasets is needed to establish the robustness of this pattern. 2. Here, we analysed maximum recorded lifespan, body mass, and social organisation data for 1,436 mammal species using Bayesian phylogenetic comparative methods, confirming [...]

Continental scale light-temperature extremes reveal key behavioural trade-offs

Daniel Gambra, Marta Peláez, Ramón Perea, et al.

Published: 2026-02-16
Subjects: Life Sciences

Daily rhythms determine ecological interactions, but we rarely know how animals convert activity schedules into movement and space use across extreme light–temperature regimes. Using multi-annual GPS data from 76 Golden Eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) tracked across Scandinavia and Iberia (spanning 35° latitude), we quantified diel activity and displacement to test how photoperiod and temperature [...]

Making movement ecology into a predictive science

Franziska Hacker, Charlotte Christensen, Grace H Davis, et al.

Published: 2026-02-16
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

1. Movement allows animals to change their environmental surroundings and remain in suitable conditions. As environments shift, e.g. through predictable seasonal progression, individuals can adapt their movement strategies accordingly. However, novel climate change introduces unpredictable, atypical conditions (e.g. droughts, floods), which may drive distinct movement responses. Predicting how [...]

Temporal and Spatial Variation in Temperature and Oxygen at the Microscale: Key Niche Axes for Aquatic Life

Wilco C.E.P. Verberk, David T Bilton

Published: 2026-02-16
Subjects: Life Sciences

To understand animal adaptations we need accurate estimates of the ecological factors impacting on organisms in nature. Whilst temperature is a well-established driver of physiological performance, its effects in aquatic systems are closely linked to water oxygenation. Oxygen levels are expected to differ spatially and fluctuate temporally much more strongly in water than on land, but our [...]

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