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Featuring research on pesticide impacts on wild bees, population genomics of avian brood parasitism, the origins of terrestrial herbivory, and a Comment on conservation abandonment

Announcements

  • Heliconius butterflies

    2025 marks 200 years since the birth of Henry Walter Bates, who gave the first scientific account of mimicry in butterflies. To commemorate this anniversary, we bring together a selection of research articles and news and opinion pieces on mimicry and other forms of deception from across journals in the Nature portfolio.

  • Image of corals

    Corals, Coasts and One Health is focused on addressing the urgent challenges facing coral reefs and connected coastal ecosystems. The conference program will bridge scales and disciplines, linking microbial ecology, ecosystem dynamics and the broader societal and policy contexts of factors shaping reef health today. Join us in Saudi Arabia from February 14-16, 2026. Learn more about the event here

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    • A high-throughput laboratory experiment tracking the assembly of soil-derived communities shows that species-rich bacterial necromass supports increasingly diverse communities, with each additional dead species expanding opportunities for niche partitioning.

      • Martina Dal Bello
      News & Views
    • Across the planet, microorganisms that are phylogenetically related can be found in similar communities, which suggests shared ecological preferences. This global pattern, which we term ‘community conservatism’, parallels well-established macroscopic ecological concepts such as phylogenetic signal and niche conservatism.

      Research Briefing
    • A clade-wide study of non-human primates shows that same-sex sexual behaviour typically appears in long-lived, sexually dimorphic species with complex social structures that experience predation, resource scarcity or environmental challenge.

      • Isabelle C. Winder
      News & Views
    • This Perspective synthesizes insights from the past use of nature markets to identify design factors that are necessary if such markets are to achieve their environmental aims—although qualitative scoring of existing markets against these rules identifies pervasive gaps.

      • Sophus O.S.E. zu Ermgassen
      • Tom Swinfield
      • Megan C. Evans
      Perspective
  • Recent expanded Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) listings for sharks and rays are welcome — yet seizing this opportunity requires that international trade policy is treated not as an end point, but as a catalyst for wider regulatory and market-based reforms.

    • Hollie Booth
    Comment
  • Sometimes our editors can be spotted out in the wild at conferences and institute visits. We look back at some of our activities over the past year and look forward to what’s on the horizon in 2026.

    Editorial

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