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Aug 29, 2024 |
biorxiv.org | Rampal Etienne |David Murrell |Alex Pigot |Bouwe Rutger Reijenga
AbstractEcological communities are assembled over time, suggesting a crucial role for evolutionary history in determining the diversity of species assemblages. Indeed, differences in the build-up of sympatric diversity across space, time and clades may reflect variation in the historical patterns of speciation and thus time available for colonisation.
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Jul 15, 2024 |
nature.com | Andreas Meyer |Alex Pigot |Cory Merow |Kristin Kaschner |Kathleen Kesner-Reyes
AbstractClimate change is exposing marine species to unsuitable temperatures while also creating new thermally suitable habitats of varying persistence. However, understanding how these different dynamics will unfold over time remains limited.
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Dec 12, 2023 |
phys.org | Alex Pigot
As delegates discuss the climate crisis in Dubai for COP28, the dazzling variety of life found on Earth hangs in the balance. Our world has warmed by roughly 1.2°C since the pre-industrial period.
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Dec 12, 2023 |
downtoearth.org.in | Alex Pigot
As delegates discuss the climate crisis in Dubai for COP28, the dazzling variety of life found on Earth hangs in the balance.
Our world has warmed by roughly 1.2°C since the pre-industrial period. Many species are already exposed to increasingly intolerable conditions, driving some populations to die off or contract at the hottest edges of their geographic ranges. Biodiversity is feeling the heat in all ecosystems and regions, from mountain tops to ocean depths.
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Dec 11, 2023 |
tolerance.ca | Alex Pigot
As delegates discuss the climate crisis in Dubai for COP28, the dazzling variety of life found on Earth hangs in the balance. Our world has warmed by roughly 1.2°C since the pre-industrial period. Many species are already exposed to increasingly intolerable conditions, driving some populations to die off or contract at the hottest edges of their geographic ranges. Biodiversity is feeling the heat in all ecosystems and regions, from mountain tops to ocean depths.
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Dec 11, 2023 |
ca.sports.yahoo.com | Alex Pigot
Dec. 11 (UPI) -- As delegates discuss the climate crisis in Dubai for COP28, the dazzling variety of life found on Earth hangs in the balance. Our world has warmed by roughly 1.2°C since the pre-industrial period. Many species are exposed to increasingly intolerable conditions, driving some populations to die off or contract at the hottest edges of their geographic ranges. Biodiversity is feeling the heat in all ecosystems and regions, from mountain tops to ocean depths.
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Dec 11, 2023 |
yahoo.com | Alex Pigot
Dec. 11 (UPI) -- As delegates discuss the climate crisis in Dubai for COP28, the dazzling variety of life found on Earth hangs in the balance. Our world has warmed by roughly 1.2°C since the pre-industrial period. Many species are exposed to increasingly intolerable conditions, driving some populations to die off or contract at the hottest edges of their geographic ranges. Biodiversity is feeling the heat in all ecosystems and regions, from mountain tops to ocean depths.
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Dec 11, 2023 |
theconversation.com | Alex Pigot
As delegates discuss the climate crisis in Dubai for COP28, the dazzling variety of life found on Earth hangs in the balance. Our world has warmed by roughly 1.2°C since the pre-industrial period. Many species are already exposed to increasingly intolerable conditions, driving some populations to die off or contract at the hottest edges of their geographic ranges. Biodiversity is feeling the heat in all ecosystems and regions, from mountain tops to ocean depths.
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Dec 11, 2023 |
ca.sports.yahoo.com | Alex Pigot
As delegates discuss the climate crisis in Dubai for COP28, the dazzling variety of life found on Earth hangs in the balance. Our world has warmed by roughly 1.2°C since the pre-industrial period. Many species are already exposed to increasingly intolerable conditions, driving some populations to die off or contract at the hottest edges of their geographic ranges. Biodiversity is feeling the heat in all ecosystems and regions, from mountain tops to ocean depths.
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Oct 28, 2023 |
biorxiv.org | Ferran Sayol |Bouwe R. Reijenga |Joseph A. Tobias |Alex Pigot
AbstractThe capacity of organisms to adapt to vacant niches or changing environments is limited by physical constraints on morphological evolution. Substantial progress has been made in identifying how these constraints shape the form and function of producers (plants), but our understanding of evolutionary limits in consumers (animals) remains highly limited, in part because the requisite data have not been available at sufficient scale.