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Abstract Understanding the relationship between precipitation (PPT) and aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) is essential for modeling the global carbon cycle. Across grassland to forest gradients, the PPT‐ANPP relationship is well defined and nonlinear. Temporal patterns within a site over time are more variable and nearly always linear. Linear relationships, however, are inconsistent with positive asymmetry, where increases in ANPP during wet years exceed declines in dry years. The double asymmetry model predicts that concave‐down nonlinearities will occur when extreme high and low PPT years are included in a time series. We tested this prediction using long‐term observational ANPP data along with rainfall manipulation experiments. By combining observational records with experimental treatments, including drought, water addition, and nitrogen addition, we found some support for the double asymmetry model. However, the response under high precipitation coupled with nitrogen addition was concave‐up, not down. By experimentally extending the range of monsoon precipitation, we found a weak but significant, nonlinear PPT‐ANPP relationship, but only when nutrient limitation was alleviated. Our results demonstrate that multiple interacting factors govern the PPT‐ANPP relationship within a site over time, challenging our ability to predict how ANPP will respond to changes in precipitation in the future.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available August 1, 2026
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Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2026
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Abstract Dryland productivity is highly sensitive to precipitation variability, and models predict that rainfall variability will increase in the future. Numerous studies have documented the relationship between productivity and precipitation, but most focus on aboveground production (ANPP), while the effects on belowground production (BNPP) remain poorly understood. Furthermore, previous research suggests that ANPP and BNPP are uncoupled within ecosystems, but the degree to which rainfall variability affects the interplay between aboveground and belowground production is unknown. We conducted a long‐term rainfall manipulation experiment in Chihuahuan Desert grassland to investigate how the size and frequency of growing season rain events affected BNPP and its relationship to ANPP. Experimental plots received either 12 small‐frequent rain events or 3 large‐infrequent events during the monsoon season for a total of 60 mm of added rainfall per treatment per year. All plots, including three controls, received ambient rainfall throughout the year. Total BNPP ranged from a low of 94.7 ± 38.2 g m2year−1under ambient conditions to a high of 183.7 ± 44.6 g m2year−1under the small‐frequent rainfall treatment. Total BNPP was highest under small‐frequent rain events, and there was no difference in BNPP between 0–15 and 15–30 cm soil depths in either rainfall treatment. ANPP and BNPP were uncorrelated within rainfall treatments, but weakly positively correlated across all plots and years. Our results contribute to a growing body of research on the importance of small rain events in drylands and provide further evidence regarding the weak coupling between aboveground and belowground processes.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available September 1, 2026
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Abstract The Nippostrongylinae is a group of strongylid nematodes that includes species typically associated with coprophagous mammals; in the New World, it is represented by 82 species within 11 genera. Two main morphological features, the synlophe and the caudal bursa, are used to evaluate the characteristics that allow identification and classification of the organisms in the taxon. However, the analysis of these characters often requires a partial or total destruction of specimens and therefore morphological variation is studied in only a very small subset of organisms per species. To evaluate the phylogenetic signal from these characteristics, we use genetic data to reconstruct the first phylogeny for the Nippostrongylinae using nuclear and mitochondrial genes and include representatives of the most common and diverse genera. The reconstructed phylogeny features five distinct clades and allows us to identify three non-monophyletic taxa includingCarolinensis, VexillataandHassalstrongylus. From these,Carolinensis s. l. is divided into four genera includingCarolinensis, Boreostrongylus, Neoboreostrongylusn. gen. andTepalcuaneman. gen.Stunkardionemais resurrected to includeVexillata noviberiaeandHassalstrongylusis divided into two, establishingLovostrongylusn. gen. to include species that are closely related toGuerrerostrongylusandTrichofreitasia. Organisms in these three genera feature a caudal arrangement of type 2-2-1. Furthermore, species inHassalstrongylus sensu strictoare more closely related to species inMalvinemaandStilestrongylus. Our results reveal the existence of an additional unnamed genus and underscore the usefulness of framing morphological characters in a comparative framework. A key for genera from the Americas is proposed.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available September 1, 2026
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Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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Abstract Structure‐forming foundation species facilitate consumers by providing habitat and refugia. In return, consumers can benefit foundation species by reducing top‐down pressures and increasing the supply of nutrients. Consumer‐mediated nutrient dynamics (CND) fuel the growth of autotrophic foundation species and generate more habitat for consumers, forming reciprocal feedbacks. Such feedbacks are threatened when foundation species are lost to disturbances, yet testing these interactions requires long‐term studies, which are rare. Here, we experimentally evaluated how disturbance to giant kelp, a marine foundation species, affects (1) CND of the forest animal community and (2) nutrient feedbacks that help sustain forest primary production during extended periods of low nitrate. Our experiment involved removing giant kelp annually during the winter for 10 years at four sites to mimic frequent wave disturbance. We paired temporal changes in the forest community in kelp removal and control plots with estimates of taxon‐specific ammonium excretion rates (reef fishes and macroinvertebrates) and nitrogen (N) demand (giant kelp and understory macroalgae) to determine the effects of disturbance on CND as measured by ammonium excretion, N demand by kelp forest macroalgae, and the percentage of nitrogen demand met by ammonium excretion. We found that disturbance to giant kelp decreased ammonium excretion by 66% over the study, mostly due to declines in fishes. Apart from a few fish species that dominated CND, most reef‐associated consumers were unaffected by disturbance. Disturbance to giant kelp reduced its N demand by 56% but increased that of the understory by 147% due to its increased abundance in the absence of a kelp canopy. Overall, disturbance had little effect on the fraction of N demand of macroalgae met by consumer excretion due to the offsetting responses of giant kelp, understory macroalgae, and consumers to disturbance. Across both disturbance regimes, on average, consumers supported 11%–12% of the N required by all kelp forest macroalgae and 48% of N demand by the understory macroalgae (which are confined to the benthos where most reef‐associated consumers reside). Our findings suggest that CND constitutes a considerable contribution of N required in kelp forests, yet nutrient inputs decrease following reductions in essential habitat perpetuated by frequent disturbances.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
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The primary mechanism driving plant species loss after nitrogen (N) addition has been often hypothesized to be asymmetric competition for light, resulting from increased aboveground biomass. However, it is largely unknown whether plants’ access to soil water at different depths would affect their responses, fate, and community composition under nitrogen addition. In a semiarid grassland exposed to 8-years of N addition, we measured plant aboveground biomass and diversity under four nitrogen addition rates (0, 4, 10, and 16 g m 2 year 1), and evaluated plant use of water across the soil profile using oxygen isotope. Aboveground biomass increased significantly, but diversity and shallow soil-water content decreased, with increasing rate of nitrogen addition. The water isotopic signature for both plant and soil water at the high N rate indicated that Leymus secalinus (a perennial grass) absorbed 7% more water from the subsurface soil layer (20e100 cm) compared to Elymus dahuricus (a perennial grass) and Artemisia annua (an annual forb). L. secalinus thus had a significantly larger biomass and was more abundant than the other two species at the high N rate but did not differ significantly from the other two species under ambient and the low N rate. Species that could use water from deeper soil layers became dominant when water in the shallow layers was insufficient to meet the demands of increased aboveground plant biomass. Our study highlights the importance of water across soil depths as key driver of plant growth and dominance in grasslands under N addition.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026
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ABSTRACT Ecological stability plays a crucial role in determining the sustainability of ecosystem functioning and nature's contribution to people. Although the disruptive effects of extreme drought on ecosystem structure and functions are widely recognized, their effect on the stability of above‐ and belowground productivity remains understudied. We assessed the effects of drought on ecosystem stability using a 3‐year drought experiment established in six Eurasian steppe grasslands. The treatments imposed included ambient precipitation, chronic drought (66% reduction in precipitation throughout the growing season), and intense drought (complete exclusion of precipitation for two months during the growing season). We found that drought, irrespective of how it was imposed, reduced the stability of aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) but had little impact on belowground net primary productivity (BNPP) stability. Reduced ANPP stability under drought was primarily attributed to changes in subordinate species stability, with mean annual precipitation (MAP) and its variability, historical drought frequency, and the aridity index (AI) also influencing responses to extreme drought. In contrast, BNPP stability was not related to any community factor investigated, but it was influenced by MAP variability and AI. Our findings that above‐ and belowground productivity stability in grasslands are differentially sensitive to multi‐year extreme drought under both common (MAP and AI) as well as unique drivers (plant community changes) highlight the complexity of predicting carbon cycle dynamics as hydrological extremes become more severe.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
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Hodgins, Kathryn (Ed.)Abstract Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) have enabled teleost fishes to repeatedly colonize polar seas. Four AFP types have convergently evolved in several fish lineages. AFPs inhibit ice crystal growth and lower tissue freezing point. In lineages with AFPs, species inhabiting colder environments may possess more AFP copies. Elucidating how differences in AFP copy number evolve is challenging due to the genes’ tandem array structure and consequently poor resolution of these repetitive regions. Here, we explore the evolution of type III AFPs (AFP III) in the globally distributed suborder Zoarcoidei, leveraging six new long-read genome assemblies. Zoarcoidei has fewer genomic resources relative to other polar fish clades while it is one of the few groups of fishes adapted to both the Arctic and Southern Oceans. Combining these new assemblies with additional long-read genomes available for Zoarcoidei, we conducted a comprehensive phylogenetic test of AFP III evolution and modeled the effects of thermal habitat and depth on AFP III gene family evolution. We confirm a single origin of AFP III via neofunctionalization of the enzyme sialic acid synthase B. We also show that AFP copy number increased under low temperature but decreased with depth, potentially because pressure lowers freezing point. Associations between the environment and AFP III copy number were driven by duplications of paralogs that were translocated out of the ancestral locus at which AFP III arose. Our results reveal novel environmental effects on AFP evolution and demonstrate the value of high-quality genomic resources for studying how structural genomic variation shapes convergent adaptation.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available October 1, 2026
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Abstract In this first report of endoparasites from endemic land-mammals of the Galápagos Islands, we describe a new species of cestode of the genusRaillietina(Cyclophyllidea: Davaineidae) from a species ofNesoryzomysand summarize the extent of helminth parasitism in both oryzomyine endemics and introduced species ofRattus. Up to the current time, no helminth parasites have been reported from rodents of the Galápagos, and little work has yet been done describing and synthesizing Galápagos parasite diversity. In historical times, several species of autochthonous rodents have occupied the islands including:Nesoryzomys narboroughiHeller 1904,N. fernandinaeHutterer and Hirsch 1979,N. swarthiOrr, 1938, andAegialomys galapagoensis(Waterhouse, 1839). Colonization of the islands by humans brought 3 known species of synanthropic rodents:Rattus rattus, R. norvegicus, andMus musculuswhich are suspected to have caused the extinction of at least 3 other oryzomyines in historical times.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
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