Jingyi LiUlrich BroseBenjamin RosenbaumRyser, RemoRemoRyserEmilio Berti2024-10-162024-10-162024-09https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/120221Information transmission among species is a fundamental aspect of natural ecosystems that faces significant disruption from rapidly growing anthropogenic sensory pollution. Understanding the constraints of information flow on species' trophic interactions is often overlooked due to a limited comprehension of the mechanisms of information transmission and the absence of adequate analytical tools. To fill this gap, we developed a sensory information‐constrained functional response (IFR) framework, which accounts for the information transmission between predator and prey. Through empirical evaluation, the IFR provided a biologically grounded explanation for the systematic variation of functional responses. Specifically, it posits that the variation of different functional‐response shapes, associated with community stability, is attributable to limitations in sensory information transmission among species. This not only deepens our mechanistic understanding of species interactions but also elucidates how anthropogenic activities are reshaping species interactions and community dynamics by disrupting information exchange through sensory pollution.eninteraction strengthpredationsensory pollutiontrophic interaction500 - Science::580 - Plants (Botany)Decoding Information Flow and Sensory Pollution: A Systematic Framework for Understanding Species Interactionsarticle10.48620/340753935490710.1111/ele.14522