29 research outputs found

    Species-Specific Effects on Ecosystem Functioning Can Be Altered by Interspecific Interactions

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    Biological assemblages are constantly undergoing change, with species being introduced, extirpated and experiencing shifts in their densities. Theory and experimentation suggest that the impacts of such change on ecosystem functioning should be predictable based on the biological traits of the species involved. However, interspecific interactions could alter how species affect functioning, with the strength and sign of interactions potentially depending on environmental context (e.g. homogenous vs. heterogeneous conditions) and the function considered. Here, we assessed how concurrent changes to the densities of two common marine benthic invertebrates, Corophium volutator and Hediste diversicolor, affected the ecological functions of organic matter consumption and benthic-pelagic nutrient flux. Complementary experiments were conducted within homogenous laboratory microcosms and naturally heterogeneous field plots. When the densities of the species were increased within microcosms, interspecific interactions enhanced effects on organic matter consumption and reduced effects on nutrient flux. Trait-based predictions of how each species would affect functioning were only consistently supported when the density of the other species was low. In field plots, increasing the density of either species had a positive effect on organic matter consumption (with no significant interspecific interactions) but no effect on nutrient flux. Our results indicate that species-specific effects on ecosystem functioning can be altered by interspecific interactions, which can be either facilitative (positive) or antagonistic (negative) depending on the function considered. The impacts of biodiversity change may therefore not be predictable based solely on the biological traits of the species involved. Possible explanations for why interactions were detected in microcosms but not in the field are discussed

    Studies of the muon momentum calibration and performance of the ATLAS detector with pp collisions at √s=13 TeV

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    Luminosity determination in pp collisions at √s=13TeV using the ATLAS detector at the LHC

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    Search for dark matter produced in association with a Higgs boson decaying to tau leptons at s = 13 TeV with the ATLAS detector

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    A search for dark matter produced in association with a Higgs boson in final states with two hadronically decaying τ-leptons and missing transverse momentum is presented. The analysis uses 139 fb−1 of proton-proton collision data at..

    Measurement of Suppression of Large-Radius Jets and Its Dependence on Substructure in <math display="inline"><mrow><mi>Pb</mi><mo>+</mo><mi>Pb</mi></mrow></math> Collisions at <math display="inline"><mrow><msqrt><mrow><msub><mrow><mi>s</mi></mrow><mrow><mi>N</mi><mi>N</mi></mrow></msub></mrow></msqrt><mo>=</mo><mn>5.02</mn><mtext> </mtext><mtext> </mtext><mi>TeV</mi></mrow></math> with the ATLAS Detector

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    International audienceThis letter presents a measurement of the nuclear modification factor of large-radius jets in sNN=5.02  TeV Pb+Pb collisions by the ATLAS experiment. The measurement is performed using 1.72  nb-1 and 257  pb-1 of Pb+Pb and pp data, respectively. The large-radius jets are reconstructed with the anti-kt algorithm using a radius parameter of R=1.0, by reclustering anti-kt R=0.2 jets, and are measured over the transverse momentum (pT) kinematic range of 158&lt;pT&lt;1000  GeV and absolute pseudorapidity |y|&lt;2.0. The large-radius jet constituents are further reclustered using the kt algorithm in order to obtain the splitting parameters, d12 and ΔR12, which characterize the transverse momentum scale and angular separation for the hardest splitting in the jet, respectively. The nuclear modification factor, RAA, obtained by comparing the Pb+Pb jet yields to those in pp collisions, is measured as a function of jet transverse momentum (pT) and d12 or ΔR12. A significant difference in the quenching of large-radius jets having single subjet and those with more complex substructure is observed. Systematic comparison of jet suppression in terms of RAA for different jet definitions is also provided. Presented results support the hypothesis that jets with hard internal splittings lose more energy through quenching and provide a new perspective for understanding the role of jet structure in jet suppression
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