Ecology Society of America honors three EEB members' publication
In their paper “Eco-evolutionary emergence of macroecological scaling in plankton communities”, lead author and postdoctoral scholar Jonas Wickman and co-authors Elena Litchman and Chris Klausmeier, all EEB members, tackle the fundamental challenge of scaling up the processes governing relationships at the individual level – such as cell volume and size, respiration, or affinity for Nitrogen – to explain patterns at the population, community, and ecosystem levels – e.g., between prey and predator densities, functional traits, or ecosystem function.
While often invoked, this individual-to-ecosystems scaling up is rarely achieved in practice. Wickman and collaborators
meaningfully accomplished this lofty goal through an eco-evolutionary model whose elegant predictions they tested with empirical data (for good measure!). In showing that meaningful scaling up across levels of biological organization requires accounting for both ecological and evolutionary processes, this paper addresses a long-standing issue in ecology, yields novel testable
predictions, and stands out as a beacon that should guide new scientific inquiry by current and future scholars of theoretical ecology.
Litchman is in integrative biology and Klausmeier, who mentors Wickman, is in plant biology and integrative biology. All are at Kellogg Biological Station.
ESA notes that at a time when our sense of wonder and awe for the natural world seems overshadowed by multiple environmental and societal challenges – both real and manufactured– this paper is a testament to the enduring power of the scientific endeavor, and to our collective ability to continue addressing the most fundamental questions in biology through novel theoretical approaches, despite all odds.
Read the full announcement on the ESA website.



