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      Ecological network complexity scales with area

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          The future of biodiversity.

          Recent extinction rates are 100 to 1000 times their pre-human levels in well-known, but taxonomically diverse groups from widely different environments. If all species currently deemed "threatened" become extinct in the next century, then future extinction rates will be 10 times recent rates. Some threatened species will survive the century, but many species not now threatened will succumb. Regions rich in species found only within them (endemics) dominate the global patterns of extinction. Although new technology provides details of habitat losses, estimates of future extinctions are hampered by our limited knowledge of which areas are rich in endemics.
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            Ecological networks and their fragility.

            Darwin used the metaphor of a 'tangled bank' to describe the complex interactions between species. Those interactions are varied: they can be antagonistic ones involving predation, herbivory and parasitism, or mutualistic ones, such as those involving the pollination of flowers by insects. Moreover, the metaphor hints that the interactions may be complex to the point of being impossible to understand. All interactions can be visualized as ecological networks, in which species are linked together, either directly or indirectly through intermediate species. Ecological networks, although complex, have well defined patterns that both illuminate the ecological mechanisms underlying them and promise a better understanding of the relationship between complexity and ecological stability.
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              Species and Area

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                Journal
                Nature Ecology & Evolution
                Nat Ecol Evol
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                2397-334X
                January 13 2022
                Article
                10.1038/s41559-021-01644-4
                35027724
                2edd64d6-93fe-4a43-90cc-a15679b9c0ef
                © 2022

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

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