Skip to main content

Preprints

There are 3266 Preprints listed.

Towards comparability among state-and-transition models: A set of generalised templates linked to ecosystem condition

Suzanne M Prober, Megan Kate Good, Helen Murphy, et al.

Published: 2026-05-19
Subjects: Life Sciences

Growing commitments to environmental sustainability and nature conservation by industry, government and communities globally have led to a pressing need for consistent methods to characterise and quantify outcomes of land use and ecological restoration. State-and-transition models (STMs) are widely used to describe and communicate knowledge about ecosystem dynamics and are increasingly applied in [...]

Expanding the sentinel approach through multimodal integration: resolving underlying ecological processes with eDNA and computer vision

Yuval Cohen, Jordan Patrick Cuff, Liora Shaltiel-Harpaz

Published: 2026-05-19
Subjects: Behavior and Ethology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Research Methods in Life Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

Sentinel approaches provide a semi-controlled method for quantifying in-field ecological interactions and processes while reducing bias and labour. They are, however, limited by difficulties ascribing taxonomic identities, behavioural context and temporal resolution to interacting agents. The integration of additional sources of data, including the analysis of DNA left behind on sentinel objects [...]

Feeding Ecology and Conservation of the Mediterranean Monk Seal, (Monachus monachus)

Ines Moreira Santos, Rebecca LST Netels, Ashlie J. McIvor, et al.

Published: 2026-05-19
Subjects: Life Sciences

The Mediterranean monk seal (Monachus monachus) is one of the world’s most endangered pinnipeds, persisting as a small number of fragmented populations exposed to continuing anthropogenic pressure. Understanding its feeding ecology is therefore important not only for clarifying its trophic role and habitat use, but also for informing conservation actions related to fisheries overlap, prey [...]

Ecoregion drives intraspecific variation of secondary chemistry in a big sagebrush common garden

Elle Teri, Carolyn Dadabay, Debbie Conner, et al.

Published: 2026-05-19
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Phytochemistry plays an integral role in the health and survival of plants and can mediate community interactions, communication with neighboring plants, protection against disease and herbivores, and attraction of pollinators. We measured non-volatile compounds using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and volatile compounds using gas chromatography (GC) at two different time points [...]

Summarizing Populations: Characterizing the Effects of Sampling in Computational Evolutionary Replay Experiments

Nikolai Escondo, Austin James Ferguson

Published: 2026-05-19
Subjects: Evolution

When we sample an evolving population, how well do we capture its long-term evolutionary potential? This question underlies the validity of analytical replay experiments, which restart evolution from multiple points in a population’s history to measure how long-term potential changed over time. Analytical replay experiments are becoming increasingly popular in both wet-lab and computational [...]

Reframing the habitat fragmentation debate around the inferential targets predicted by ecological theory

Juan Andrés Martínez Lanfranco, Erin M. Bayne

Published: 2026-05-14
Subjects: Life Sciences

The habitat fragmentation debate has persisted for more than three decades because dominant empirical practice has often estimated a narrower quantity than the competing ecological theories jointly require. These frameworks differ not simply in whether fragmentation matters, but in how their predicted effects change along the habitat-amount gradient. The habitat amount hypothesis (HAH) predicts [...]

Centering human cognition in epidemiological models

Brian Beckage, Louis J Gross, Ari Freedman, et al.

Published: 2026-05-14
Subjects: Medicine and Health Sciences, Social and Behavioral Sciences

Epidemiological models (EMs) have traditionally treated human behavior as static or as a simple function of disease prevalence, limiting their ability to capture disease trajectories such as those observed during the COVID-19 pandemic. We argue that infectious disease is fundamentally a coupled human-pathogen system in which cognition and behavior operate on different timescales and must be [...]

Removal and decomposition of fruit respond in opposite ways to canopy cover in a biodiversity experiment

Finn Rehling, Luisa Martha Senger, Franz Tillmann Niedernhoefer, et al.

Published: 2026-05-14
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Entomology

Trees often produce more fruits than frugivores consume. As a result, many fruits fall to the ground, where they are either secondarily removed by vertebrates, potentially leading to seed dispersal, or they are decomposed by arthropods. Although often neglected, fallen fruits are an important component of forests and contribute to their functioning via these two distinct pathways. While fruit [...]

The Global Biodiversity Framework supports global assessment of One Health actions

Francis Banville, Claire Burnel, Colin J Carlson, et al.

Published: 2026-05-14
Subjects: Biodiversity, Environmental Health and Protection, Environmental Monitoring, Life Sciences, Public Health

The One Health approach promotes collaboration across disciplines to enhance the health of humans, animals, plants, and the environment. Recently developed by the Quadripartite organizations, the One Health Joint Plan of Action (2022-2026) supports countries in adopting the One Health approach through six action tracks. The tracks address multiple aspects of biodiversity, containing guiding [...]

Making use of oak genomes

Andrew L Hipp, Antoine Kremer

Published: 2026-05-13
Subjects: Biodiversity, Botany, Genomics, Life Sciences

This review summarizes the contributions of genomics to our understanding of oak evolution and management, both past and ongoing. Far from being exhaustive given the large number of publications following the publication of the genomes, this review emphasizes work conducted in the decade following publication of the first two complete oak genome assemblies, and major findings and achievements [...]

Nature finance: we need (some) offsets

Joseph W Bull

Published: 2026-05-13
Subjects: Biodiversity, Environmental Studies

Nature offsets – mechanisms that allow for negative environmental impacts (e.g. biodiversity loss, greenhouse gas emissions) to be fully compensated for and neutralized – are extremely widespread, but have become increasingly controversial, to the extent they are now starting to be precluded from new environmental policy developments. In turn, leaders are becoming more reticent about their [...]

The bacterial immune system: identifying evolved defense adaptations

Ellinor Alseth, Sam P Brown

Published: 2026-05-13
Subjects: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Evolution, Microbiology

The last few years have witnessed a rapid expansion of reported bacterial defense mechanisms. Alongside established mechanisms of defense against molecular parasites (e.g. CRISPR-Cas, restriction-modification), hundreds of novel defenses are being described each year, contributing to an ever-expanding ‘bacterial immune system’. Terms like ‘defense’ and ‘immune’ are often used as shorthand for an [...]

Harnessing hidden synergies in conservation planning: do “umbrella action plans” reduce redundancy and improve efficiency?

Stefano Lucchesi, Erin Wessling

Published: 2026-05-13
Subjects: Biodiversity

Conservation Action Plans (APs) are widely used to guide biodiversity interventions, but they are often developed in isolation, leading to redundancy and poorly coordinated implementation. We assess whether identifying thematic overlap among APs can reveal practical opportunities for coordination, and introduce the concept of Umbrella Action Plans (UAPs) as a framework to streamline conservation [...]

HARBOUR PORPOISE RESPONSES TO PILE DRIVING ARE BETTER PREDICTED BY DISTANCE TO SOURCE THAN BY ENERGY-BASED RECEIVED SOUND LEVELS

Paul M Thompson, Aude Benhemma-Le Gall, Barbara Cheney, et al.

Published: 2026-05-13
Subjects: Life Sciences

1. Regulatory assessments for offshore construction are required to avoid impacts on protected marine mammals through noise-related injury or disturbance. Criteria for injury risk are widely accepted, but the extent to which behavioural responses are related to noise levels or co-varying contextual factors such as proximity remains uncertain. 2. This study used arrays of echolocation detectors [...]

A Game-Theoretic and Dynamical-Systems Framework for Anti-Poaching Resource Allocation: A Case Study of Etosha National Park

Ka Hin Chan, Long Nam Ao, Weng Kin Loi, et al.

Published: 2026-05-12
Subjects: Biodiversity, Natural Resources and Conservation, Population Biology

Wildlife poaching threatens biodiversity across sub-Saharan Africa, and is especially acute for critically endangered species such as the black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis). Etosha National Park, Namibia (22,935 km²), is patrolled by approximately 295 anti-poaching rangers—fewer than 0.02 per km²—posing two interlinked operational questions: where should a limited workforce be placed to maximise [...]

search

You can search by:

  • Title
  • Keywords
  • Author Name
  • Author Affiliation