Research Frontiers
Synthesized boundaries between what scientists know and what they don't, with identifiable paths to push the boundary forward. Each frontier is built from atomic gap-statements extracted across the research neighborhoods of the RMBL Knowledge Fabric, then clustered by semantic similarity and synthesized into a coherent narrative.
4 of 98 frontiers · Flowering & Pollination
Evolutionary Rescue Limits in Subalpine Plants
Bridges evolutionary genetics, population demography, pollination ecology, and landscape climatology because predicting persistence requires all four to be modeled jointly rather than studied in isolation.
Non-Native Flowers as Ecological Traps for Solitary Bees
The frontier bridges pollination ecology, invasion biology, and population demography, because the trap hypothesis can only be confirmed where behavior, nutrition, and multi-year fitness are evaluated together.
Rewiring Capacity and Collapse in Pollination Networks
Bridges network ecology, plant reproductive biology, and pollinator behavioral ecology — a bridge that matters because structural descriptions of resilience are not yet anchored to fitness outcomes that determine real-world persistence.
Next-Generation Demographic Distribution Models for Alpine Plants
Bridges plant demography, soil science, and spatial ecology because robust population forecasts in heterogeneous mountain terrain require all three to be modeled jointly rather than in sequence.