
JEC: Interview with Irena Šímová
The paper by Šímová, Li & Storch can be accessed for free at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2745.12011/abstract.
14 Feb 20131min

JEC: Interview with Tom Ezard - University of Southampton
Music credit: [Plays Guitar](http://freemusicarchive.org/music/gillicuddy/Plays_Guitar/) to [Gillicuddy](http://www.gillicuddy.net/)
11 Feb 20135min

JEC: Interview with Frederic Barraquand of University of Tromso in Norway
Music credit: + artist: James Beaudreau + song: Parlor City + link: http://freemusicarchive.org/music/James_Beaudreau/Fresh_Twigs_WBR_02/9_Parlor_City
7 Feb 20134min

FE: Ecology of Stress - Robbie Wilson interviews Lanna Desantis
Coping with stress: some species survive by breaking the rules, as Lanna Desantis explains to Robbie Wilson as part of the Special Feature: The Ecology of Stress For more information, read the lay summary (http://bit.ly/VQU0Xx) and article (http://bit.ly/14qsdBq)
29 Jan 201311min

JEC: Interview with Peter Jørgensen of INNGE
In the latest Journal of Ecology podcast, Scott Chamberlain interviews Peter Jørgensen of INNGE (http://www.innge.net/). Music credit: Artist: Pajaro (https://soundcloud.com/budabeats/pajaro-santa-leone) Song: "Santa Leone" (http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Pajaro/Best_Of_Breitband_Vol4/06_pajaro_-_santa_leone_1357)
24 Jan 201320min

FE: Robbie Wilson interviews David Wilkinson on why sauropod dinosaurs were so large
The long necked sauropod dinosaurs were the largest land animals ever to walk the Earth – but why were they so large? One possibility is that it somehow involved the nature of the plant food they eat, as David Wilkinson (co-author of the paper "High C:N ratio (not low-energy content) of vegetation may have driven gigantism in sauropod dinosaurs and perhaps omnivory and/or endothermy in their juveniles." David M Wilkinson & Graeme D Ruxton 2012) explains in this interview with Robbie Wilson. Wilkinson, D. M., Ruxton, G. D. (2012), High C/N ratio (not low-energy content) of vegetation may have driven gigantism in sauropod dinosaurs and perhaps omnivory and/or endothermy in their juveniles. Functional Ecology. doi: 10.1111/1365-2435.12033 http://www.functionalecology.org/view/0/summaries.html#wilkinson http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2435.12033/abstract
10 Dec 201213min

FE: Brad Butterfield speaks with Alan Knapp about his paper on plant facilitation
Alan Knapp interviews Brad Butterfield about his paper "A functional-comparative approach to facilitation between and its context-dependence", part of an upcoming Special Feature on Mechanisms of Plant Competition, and the importance of taking a trait-based approach to plant facilitation. A great deal of research has been conducted on the mechanisms and outcomes of plant competition, what traits help plants compete, but less well understood is how such traits affect the outcome of positive interactions among plants. Butterfield, B. J., Callaway, R. M. (2012), A functional comparative approach to facilitation and its context dependence. Functional Ecology. doi: 10.1111/1365-2435.12019 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2435.12019/abstract
3 Dec 20128min




















