The development of frameworks that account for community stability and its loss to environmental disturbance (e.g. regime shifts) is central to ecology, particularly for reducing uncertainty of ecological change in increasingly variable environments. Notably, community responses to disturbance often appear abrupt and surprising, raising concerns for our ability to anticipate and manage such regime shifts. In this thesis, I explore the conceptual model that compensatory dynamics may negate the effects of disturbance prior to community restructure (i.e. changes in species composition) and that their recognition may advance our ability to anticipate loss of stability. I examine the idea that the failure to recognise the weakening of mechanisms...
Predicting ecosystem responses to global change is a major challenge in ecology. A critical step in ...
A central debate in community ecology concerns the relationship between the complexity of communitie...
Copyright © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation. Copyright © 2010 British Ecological Society.1. Th...
Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure, but the probability of transition...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd/CNRS. Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure...
© 2014 Dr. Paul Edwin CarnellHow stable is an ecosystem and what causes it to change? These are two ...
The intensity at which organisms interact is affected by abiotic conditions. Ocean warming and acidi...
Human modification of the abiotic environment can cause profound change to biological communities, y...
Globally, ecosystems are exposed to human-induced changes in the environment. The effect of environm...
Globally, ecosystems are exposed to human-induced changes in the environment. The effect of environm...
The problem of linking fine-scale processes to broad-scale patterns remains a central challenge of e...
Ecologists seem predisposed to studying change because we are intuitively interested in dynamic syst...
We review the evidence of regime shifts in terrestrial and aquatic environments in relation to resil...
Despite the increasing evidence of drastic and profound changes in many ecosystems, often referred t...
International audience1. With ever‐increasing human pressure on ecosystems, it is critically importa...
Predicting ecosystem responses to global change is a major challenge in ecology. A critical step in ...
A central debate in community ecology concerns the relationship between the complexity of communitie...
Copyright © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation. Copyright © 2010 British Ecological Society.1. Th...
Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure, but the probability of transition...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd/CNRS. Disturbance often results in small changes in community structure...
© 2014 Dr. Paul Edwin CarnellHow stable is an ecosystem and what causes it to change? These are two ...
The intensity at which organisms interact is affected by abiotic conditions. Ocean warming and acidi...
Human modification of the abiotic environment can cause profound change to biological communities, y...
Globally, ecosystems are exposed to human-induced changes in the environment. The effect of environm...
Globally, ecosystems are exposed to human-induced changes in the environment. The effect of environm...
The problem of linking fine-scale processes to broad-scale patterns remains a central challenge of e...
Ecologists seem predisposed to studying change because we are intuitively interested in dynamic syst...
We review the evidence of regime shifts in terrestrial and aquatic environments in relation to resil...
Despite the increasing evidence of drastic and profound changes in many ecosystems, often referred t...
International audience1. With ever‐increasing human pressure on ecosystems, it is critically importa...
Predicting ecosystem responses to global change is a major challenge in ecology. A critical step in ...
A central debate in community ecology concerns the relationship between the complexity of communitie...
Copyright © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation. Copyright © 2010 British Ecological Society.1. Th...