Pierluigi Colangeli
University of Potsdam
7 Papers
5 Citations
Pierluigi Colangeli is an academic researcher from University of Potsdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Keratella cochlearis & Phyllosphere. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Movement-mediated community assembly and coexistence.
Ulrike E. Schlägel,Volker Grimm,Volker Grimm,Niels Blaum,Pierluigi Colangeli,Melanie Dammhahn,Jana A. Eccard,Sebastian L. Hausmann,Antje Herde,Antje Herde,Heribert Hofer,Jasmin Joshi,Jasmin Joshi,Stephanie Kramer-Schadt,Stephanie Kramer-Schadt,Magdalena Litwin,Sissi Lozada-Gobilard,Marina E. H. Müller,Thomas Müller,Ran Nathan,Jana S. Petermann,Karin Pirhofer-Walzl,Viktoriia Radchuk,Matthias C. Rillig,Manuel Roeleke,Merlin Schäfer,Cédric Scherer,Gabriele Schiro,Carolin Scholz,Lisa Teckentrup,Ralph Tiedemann,Wiebke Ullmann,Christian C. Voigt,Christian C. Voigt,Guntram Weithoff,Florian Jeltsch +35 more
TL;DR: This work joins the movement ecology framework with the key concepts from metacommunity theory, community assembly and modern coexistence theory using the idea of micro–macro links, where various aspects of emergent movement behaviour scale up to local and regional patterns in species mobility and mobile‐link‐generated patterns in abiotic and biotic environmental conditions.
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Negative phototactic response to UVR in three cosmopolitan rotifers: a video analysis approach
Pierluigi Colangeli,Ulrike E. Schlägel,Ulrike Obertegger,Jana S. Petermann,Ralph Tiedemann,Guntram Weithoff +5 more
TL;DR: This study reveals a species-specific behavioral response to UVR in rotifers, and highlights how sexual dimorphism in B. calyciflorus does not only occur in morphology and movement, but also in behavioral traits.
14
Switching between swimming states in rotifers – case study Keratella cochlearis
TL;DR: This study elucidates the steps necessary for automatic analysis of rotifer trajectories with open-source software and suggests that switching between states is related to predator avoidance in zooplankton ecology.
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Filming of zooplankton: a case study of rotifer males and Daphnia magna
TL;DR: Filmning can be a valuable tool to ignite scientific discussion, but the videos need an open-access platform where they can be referenced in a topic-related order.
Tracking of algal cells: case study of swimming speed of cold-adapted dinoflagellates
TL;DR: An easy to use set-up for filming algal cells using Apocalathium aciculiferum and Borghiella dodgei as case studies, which linked differences in swimming speed to the dinoflagellates’ environmental niche, and suggested that B. dodgei is more adapted to turbulent spring conditions than A. acicULiferum.
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