Dear Colleagues,

Due to a last-minute cancellation, we have an opening in our 2017
Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting accepted oral session entitled
"Transcending Guilds: Mixotrophs and omnivores as regulators of ecosystem
function" (abstract below). Therefore, we are soliciting talk submissions
from the ecology community.

If you are interested in presenting your research as part of our session,
please send a title and abstract (partial abstract OK) to
[email protected] by *12:00 noon EST on Friday, 20 January
2017.* Preference will be given to talks that connect omnivory to ecosystem
function, and to early-career scientists.

Details on the ESA meeting (to be held Aug. 6-11 in Portland, OR) can be
found at: http://www.esa.org/portland/

Thank you!

Session Organizers
Holly V. Moeller, Monica Granados, and Michael G. Neubert



Session Abstract:
Trophic interactions are rarely linear and instead form a reticulate
network of multiple interactions. Mixotrophs—species that combine
phototrophic and heterotrophic metabolisms—and omnivores—organisms that
feed across multiple trophic levels—are prolific in both marine and
terrestrial ecological communities. Because their metabolic niches span
ecological guilds and trophic levels, these organisms play an important
role in modulating the flux of energy and materials through and across food
webs. For example, planktonic mixotrophs short-circuit nutrient
remineralization processes in the surface waters of lakes and oceans,
enabling additional primary production that can support larger organisms
and enhance carbon export. Omnivores, in addition to increasing food web
stability through generalist feeding behavior, are often relatively large,
motile organisms that can couple population dynamics across metacommunities
by dispersing across larger spatial scales than other community members.
Despite their importance, mixotrophs and omnivores have received relatively
little theoretical and empirical attention, in part because tractability
often necessitates simplifying assumptions about food web structure.
However, recent advances in the study of these organisms are providing new
opportunities for advances. This session brings together empiricists and
theoreticians who will describe their work on mixotrophy and omnivory using
a variety of field settings, experimental systems, and mathematical models.
Presented work will highlight how these guild- and space-spanning organisms
modulate community structure and ecosystem function, and how understanding
their ecological roles can help us predict and manage human-altered
ecosystems.

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