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research news
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Species dispersal aids
biodiversity
P lanet Earth is home to millions of species, from single-celled bacteria to plants,
insects, and mammals. Yet how this biodiversity developed—and how it
contributes to stable ecosystems—is one of the mysteries of modern
biology.In
a new study published in the Journal of Theoretical Biology, IIASA researchers
tested one of the most-often cited mechanisms linking biodiversity and ecosystem stability,
known as the spatial insurance hypothesis.
“The basic concept centers around two ideas,” explains ecologist David Shanafelt,
who led the study. “The first is that the more functionally redundant species an
ecosystem has, the more resistant it will be to environmental shocks. The second is
that immigration of species can replace those that go extinct locally, and that is why
dispersal can have a stabilizing effect on ecosystem properties, such as productivity—
the generation of biomass.”
Shanafelt is a PhD student at Arizona State University in the USA, and conducted the
study as part of his participation in the 2012 IIASA Young Scientists Summer Program,
in collaboration with IIASA Evolution and Ecology Program Director Ulf Dieckmann and
researchers Matthias Jonas and Oskar Franklin.
The study is based on a modeling framework developed by an international collaboration
of researchers. It finds that intermediate levels of species dispersal, or immigration,
can maintain the productivity of an ecosystem, even when the environmental conditions
experienced by the species are fluctuating.
“Our results have implications for real-world systems,” explains Shanafelt.
“ForÂ
example, with the growth of international trade, ecosystems are more connected,
leading to an increase in the global dispersal of species. Our results allow projecting
how this trend affects ecosystem productivity and biodiversity, under assumptions that
are more realistic than those in previous models.” KL
Further info Shanafelt DW, Dieckmann U, Jonas M, Franklin O, Loreau M, Perrings C (2015). Biodiversity,
productivity, and the spatial insurance hypothesis revisited. Journal of Theoretical Biology 380:426–435
[doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2015.06.017].
David Shanafelt David.shanafelt@asu.edu § Ulf Dieckmann dieckmann@iiasa.ac.at Chinese CO2 emissions
lower than thought
CO2 emissions in China may be more than
10% lower than previously estimated in
most international datasets, according to a
new study published in the journal Nature.
IIASA researcher Junguo Liu contributed to
the study, which analyzed the energy
content of coal from Chinese mines in a
systematic way. They found that because
coal in the region has lower energy content
than other types, previous analyses had
overestimated emissions from coal‑fired
power plants.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/chinaCO2-15
Future of world religions
The religious profile of the world is rapidly
changing, driven primarily by differences in
fertility rates and the number of young
people subscribing to the world’s major
religions, as well as by people switching
faiths, according to a new study published
in the Yearbook of International Religious
Demography. IIASA researchers developed
the projections for a recent Pew Research
Center report entitled, "The Future of World
Religions: Population Growth Projections,
2010–2050" (2 April 2015).
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/religion-15
Good practice climate policies
Replicating climate and energy policies with
proven potential around the world could
significantly contribute to bringing
greenhouse gas emissions down to meet the
target of limiting climate change to 2°C.
According to a new study from IIASA and
partners, replicating these “good practice
policies” around the world could take us a
long way towards meeting climate goals.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/goodpractice-15
Trans‑Siberian railroad remix
A new network of high‑speed trains, roads,
and telecommunication infrastructure could
forge a new link from Europe to Asia and
create a corridor of new development in
between. Researcher Yuri Gromyko
presented this vision, a project led by
academic institutions in Russia, at the fifth
workshop of the IIASA‑coordinated project,
“Challenges and Opportunities of Economic
Integration within a wider European and
Eurasian Space.” Several further workshops
are planned which will form the foundation
for the research phase of the project.
blog.iiasa.ac.at/transsiberia-15
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band winter 2015/2016"
options
Band winter 2015/2016
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2015/2016
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2015
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine