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1. Speciation in kleptoparasites of oak gall wasps often correlates with shifts into new tree habitats, tree organs, or gall morphospace.

2. Historical forest disturbance results in variation in functional resilience of seed dispersal mutualisms.

3. Symbiotic ant traits produce differential host-plant carbon and water dynamics in a multi-species mutualism.

4. The Arthropod Associates of 155 North American Cynipid Oak Galls.

5. Latitudinal gradient in species diversity provides high niche opportunities for a range-expanding phytophagous insect.

6. Speciation in Nearctic oak gall wasps is frequently correlated with changes in host plant, host organ, or both.

7. Delimiting the cryptic diversity and host preferences of Sycophila parasitoid wasps associated with oak galls using phylogenomic data.

8. Interactions between seed-dispersing ant species affect plant community composition in field mesocosms.

9. Invasive ants disperse seeds farther than native ants, affecting the spatial pattern of seedling recruitment and survival.

10. Asynchrony between ant seed dispersal activity and fruit dehiscence of myrmecochorous plants.

11. Economy of scale: third partner strengthens a keystone ant-plant mutualism.

12. Large herbivores promote habitat specialization and beta diversity of African savanna trees.

13. An invasive slug exploits an ant-seed dispersal mutualism.

14. Mutualism between co-introduced species facilitates invasion and alters plant community structure.

15. Variations in maternal care associated with differences in female rat reproductive behavior in a group-mating environment.

16. The influence of species interactions on geographic range change under climate change.

17. Impact of an invasive oak gall wasp on a native butterfly: a test of plant-mediated competition.

18. Translocation experiments with butterflies reveal limits to enhancement of poleward populations under climate change.

19. The response of two butterfly species to climatic variation at the edge of their range and the implications for poleward range shifts.

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