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期刊名:American naturalist

缩写:AM NAT

ISSN:0003-0147

e-ISSN:1537-5323

IF/分区:2.7/Q2

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共收录本刊相关文章索引4145
Clinical Trial Case Reports Meta-Analysis RCT Review Systematic Review
Classical Article Case Reports Clinical Study Clinical Trial Clinical Trial Protocol Comment Comparative Study Editorial Guideline Letter Meta-Analysis Multicenter Study Observational Study Randomized Controlled Trial Review Systematic Review
Matthew C Fitzpatrick,Stephen R Keller,Katie E Lotterhos Matthew C Fitzpatrick
AbstractGenomic forecasting is an emerging area of predictive ecology and evolution that leverages high-throughput sequencing to incorporate information on genomic variation into quantitative predictions of biological responses to environme...
Brittany M Verrico,Thibaut Capblancq,Matthew C Fitzpatrick et al. Brittany M Verrico et al.
AbstractGenomic offsets are increasingly being used to forecast maladaptation expected from the decoupling of gene-environment associations caused by an abrupt shift in climate. Such gene-environment mismatches can arise temporally from rap...
Brandon M Lind,Katie E Lotterhos Brandon M Lind
AbstractAccelerating land use and climate change threaten to disrupt relationships between adaptive variation and environmental optima of many species. Consequently, management must increasingly identify nonlocal genetic sources for restora...
Danny Jackson,Henrey A Deese,Allyson Placko et al. Danny Jackson et al.
AbstractHumans drive species evolution in numerous ways, ranging from the deliberate interventions of domestication to the indirect but far-reaching impacts of climate change. Anticipating how species will adapt to these pressures assumes t...
Thibaut Capblancq,Aurélien Tauzin,Yves Vigouroux et al. Thibaut Capblancq et al.
AbstractGenomic offset metrics are increasingly used to predict population maladaptation under changing climates, based on the assumption of a negative statistical relationship between offset measures and local relative fitness. Recent theo...
Océane Da Cunha,Rio P Dominguez,L Miles Horne et al. Océane Da Cunha et al.
AbstractAccording to optimal foraging theory, mesopredators should forage in areas where their prey is abundant while avoiding high predation risk. Here, we investigate how environmental factors influence mesopredators' abilities to minimiz...
Jason C Walsman,Arietta E Fleming-Davies,Richard J Hall et al. Jason C Walsman et al.
AbstractHumans provide massive inputs of food to wildlife, with profound ecological and evolutionary consequences. By potentially altering wildlife host immunity, density, and behavior, provisioning can influence transmission of wildlife pa...
Johannes Wirtz,Carol Eunmi Lee,Luis-Miguel Chevin Johannes Wirtz
AbstractUnder radical environmental change, populations may need to adapt quickly to avoid substantial declines in abundance and threats to their persistence. The outcome of this race between evolution and demography depends on the genetic ...
Catalina Cuellar-Gempeler,Casey P terHorst,Thomas E Miller Catalina Cuellar-Gempeler
AbstractHow biodiversity and ecosystem functions change with succession has proven to be difficult to predict. Generally, it is thought that species accumulation over time should increase function, yet other successional trajectories can ha...
David M Anderson,Mary I O&#x;Connor,Colin T Kremer David M Anderson
AbstractUnderstanding how temperature affects adaptation of cell size is challenging because cell size mediates numerous physiological and ecological trade-offs. While physiological mechanisms can lead to decreases in cell size with warming...