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Posts by Andrew Abraham

A general framework for what makes a novel ecosystem.. wonderfully led by @mattkerr.bsky.social

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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The making of novel ecosystems: A process‐based framework for measurement, analysis and application Ecological novelty is emerging rapidly due to global change drivers such as climate shifts, species introductions, defaunation, and land-use transformation. These changes challenge how we assess, ...

🌍In a new @econovoau.bsky.social paper in Methods in Ecology & Evolution, led by @mattkerr.bsky.social, we present a process-based framework linking compositional, functional, abiotic & social dimensions of novel ecosystem trajectories♨️🌿 besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...

2 months ago 23 9 0 0
Cover image for the January 2026 issue of Nature Ecology & Evolution. The photo shows a giraffe emerging from behind some vegetation. The cover headline reads "Megaherbivores and salt"

Cover image for the January 2026 issue of Nature Ecology & Evolution. The photo shows a giraffe emerging from behind some vegetation. The cover headline reads "Megaherbivores and salt"

Our January issue is now live: www.nature.com/natecolevol/...

Featuring research on 🧪

🐝 pesticide impacts on wild bees
🪺 population genomics of avian brood parasitism
🌱 the origins of terrestrial herbivory

Cover image from Abraham et al. www.nature.com/articles/s41...

3 months ago 17 7 0 3

With many thanks to: @celestemare.bsky.social, @ymalhi.bsky.social, @duvallecology.bsky.social, @jcsvenning.bsky.social, @fonsvanderplas.bsky.social, and many others not on bluesky

4 months ago 9 1 1 0
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So, next time you sit down to dinner and immediately reach for the salt shaker, spare a thought for Africa’s salt-starved megaherbivores.

4 months ago 15 1 1 1
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From crop raiding by elephants to moose collisions with cars due to road salting, wild animal movements, ecological impacts and conflict with humans are often driven by a desire to satisfy their salt cravings.

4 months ago 16 1 2 0
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Where animals can't get enough salt in their diet, they may come into conflict with humans. Many protected areas are located in low-sodium environments; yet humans have artificially increased salt availability through activities like borehole water pumping and crop fertilisation.

4 months ago 20 4 1 0
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While rhinos, kudu, springbok and zebra often gather at natural and artificial salt pans from the Kalahari Desert to the Maasai Mara.

4 months ago 13 0 2 0
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Gorillas on the other hand are known to fight for the saltiest foods, in particular decaying wood stumps that accumulate high levels of sodium (photo credit: Jessica Rothman)

4 months ago 12 1 1 0
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Salt limitation also explains several interesting behaviours exhibited by wild animals. In Kenya, elephants enter caves to consume the sodium-rich rocks, while in the Congo rainforest, they dig for salt in riverbeds

4 months ago 21 3 2 0
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Together, these results provide a new explanation for the so-called 'missing megaherbivores' in West and Central Africa. There is enough productivity to sustain higher densities of elephants, rhinos and giraffes, but a curious absence of these largest-bodied herbivores.

4 months ago 15 2 1 0
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Adding plant sodium availability improved statistical models predicting large herbivore density across Africa. We found that the largest species (megaherbivores) were the group most constrained in low-sodium environments, mirroring our previous work on the allometry of sodium requirements

4 months ago 18 1 1 0
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Interestingly, we found that in any given place, grasses had approximately 1-2x more sodium than woody plants; a pattern that was reflected by grazers generally having higher dung sodium concentrations that browsers.

4 months ago 16 0 1 0
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Over 1,300 dung measurements from across 20 different wild herbivore species confirmed our assumption that plant sodium availability is a major determinant of herbivore sodium intake.

4 months ago 15 0 1 0
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We collected a large database of plant sodium concentrations from across Africa and generated high-resolution maps, which revealed multi-scale gradients
arising from sea-salt deposition, hydrology, soil chemistry and plant traits.

4 months ago 17 1 1 0

Humans live in a world abundant in salt. In fact, medical professionals warn most of us against the dangers of consuming too much. Yet, it is far from clear how wild herbivores get enough and if this may limit their abundance.

4 months ago 13 1 1 0
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Earth's largest land animals are limited by salt.

Sodium availability constrains the density and distribution of elephants, giraffes and rhinos across Africa, and offers a new explanation for the so-called 'missing megaherbivores'.

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Free access: rdcu.be/eTPY2

4 months ago 169 78 6 17
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🦁Predators have a strong sex-bias when it comes to their favourite prey 🌏

In their new paper @andrewabraham.bsky.social quantify large carnivore sex-biases in Africa and examine how wildlife managers can replicate such effects when natural predators are missing 👇

buff.ly/Q8cB4Qq

6 months ago 7 3 0 0

Super important work by Tim Kuiper and co!

10 months ago 4 0 0 0

Great opportunity to lead discussions in biodiversity conservation for ECRs

10 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Great project, with a great team!

11 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Closing tomorrow! Last chance to apply for postdoc to explore the role of animals in savanna ecosystem productivity & nutrient cycling! Link to job: tinyurl.com/53dy4584 #savanna #termites #largemammals

11 months ago 34 27 0 1

Pretty simple instructions to follow

11 months ago 4 0 1 0
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The "great whale conveyer belt" that transports nitrogen, carbon, and biomass from high latitude feeding grounds to concentrated low latitude breeding grounds in gray, humpback, and right whales.

Lovely figure by A. Boersma
doi.org/10.1038/s414...

1 year ago 51 11 0 0

Sure to be an interesting talk by @andrebellve.bsky.social.. also, be prepared for some excellent graphics! #scicomm

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Beautiful sighting of a martial eagle eating a mongoose at iSimangaliso park today

1 year ago 5 1 0 0
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Should we stop feeding birds, what happens if we do and does it spread disease? Half of British households put food out for birds but there is increasing concern it can spread disease

Half of British households feed birds.. but should we? Ft our recent study on potential issues of nutrient pollution.
www.theguardian.com/environment/...

Full paper: esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....

1 year ago 26 11 1 2
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The stunning power of whale pee A single whale can produce more than 250 gallons of urine in a day. It helps sustain life across the ocean.

Nice coverage by Nat Geo of our new paper quantifying the longest nutrient transport system in the world: whale pee

www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/arti...

For the full paper, see here: www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 22 5 0 0
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The Great Whale Conveyor Belt: Earth's Largest Mammals Keep Oceans Thriving Large whales operate what scientists have called “the Great Whale Conveyor Belt,” the largest long-distance nutrient transport on Earth.

We recap the whole study here: whalescientists.com/the-great-wh...

1 year ago 11 7 0 0

Our world is connected in many more ways than we think! Many thanks to a fabulous co-author team, led by Joe Roman @jjkiszka.bsky.social @luishuckstadt.bsky.social

1 year ago 4 0 0 0
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