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      Feedbacks link ecosystem ecology and evolution across spatial and temporal scales: Empirical evidence and future directions

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          The Trophic-Dynamic Aspect of Ecology

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            Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology

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              Eco-evolutionary feedbacks in community and ecosystem ecology: interactions between the ecological theatre and the evolutionary play.

              Interactions between natural selection and environmental change are well recognized and sit at the core of ecology and evolutionary biology. Reciprocal interactions between ecology and evolution, eco-evolutionary feedbacks, are less well studied, even though they may be critical for understanding the evolution of biological diversity, the structure of communities and the function of ecosystems. Eco-evolutionary feedbacks require that populations alter their environment (niche construction) and that those changes in the environment feed back to influence the subsequent evolution of the population. There is strong evidence that organisms influence their environment through predation, nutrient excretion and habitat modification, and that populations evolve in response to changes in their environment at time-scales congruent with ecological change (contemporary evolution). Here, we outline how the niche construction and contemporary evolution interact to alter the direction of evolution and the structure and function of communities and ecosystems. We then present five empirical systems that highlight important characteristics of eco-evolutionary feedbacks: rotifer-algae chemostats; alewife-zooplankton interactions in lakes; guppy life-history evolution and nutrient cycling in streams; avian seed predators and plants; and tree leaf chemistry and soil processes. The alewife-zooplankton system provides the most complete evidence for eco-evolutionary feedbacks, but other systems highlight the potential for eco-evolutionary feedbacks in a wide variety of natural systems.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Functional Ecology
                Funct Ecol
                Wiley
                0269-8463
                1365-2435
                November 09 2018
                January 2019
                January 21 2019
                January 2019
                : 33
                : 1
                : 31-42
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Tennessee Knoxville Tennessee
                [2 ]Department of Biology University of Toronto Mississauga Ontario Canada
                [3 ]Department of Biology Stanford University Stanford California
                [4 ]School of Biology and Ecology University of Maine Orono Maine
                [5 ]Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Santa Cruz California
                Article
                10.1111/1365-2435.13267
                fd9aeb2c-1ae9-4386-b541-a0f38baaef7d
                © 2019

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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