Ecosystems around the world are speeding up — but what does that mean for their stability and the resources we depend on? A new international working group led by Dr. Kayla Hale at CEM explores how the pace of primary producers sets the rhythm for entire food webs.
Read MoreThe Modelling Food Web Resilience in the Great Lakes working group recently met at the Centre for Ecosystem Management to focus on discussions around resilience, governance, and modelling in ecosystem management.
Read MoreUnder what conditions can trophic diversity relationships be eroded? Our Scale Invariance in Aquatic Ecosystems working group seeks to answer that very question as we study patterns in trophic diversity relationships within aquatic ecosystems where species turnover is often significant.
Read MoreOur Structural Early Warning Signals in Aquatic Ecosystems working group is investigating how the basic connections between the organization and operation of ecosystems (such as the arrangement of different life stages and the structure of food webs) can be disrupted by global changes.
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