Density-dependence is a term used in ecology to describe processes such as birth and death rates that are regulated by the number of individuals in a population. Evolutionary biologists have borrowed the term to describe decreasing rates of species accumulation, suggesting that speciation and extinction rates depend on the total number of species in a clade. If this analogy with ecological density-dependence holds, diversification of clades is restricted because species compete for limited resources. We hypothesize that such competition should not only affect numbers of species, but also prevent species from being phenotypically similar. Here, we present a method to detect whether competitive interactions between species have ordered phenot...
If two species live on a single resource, the one with a slight advantage will out-compete the other...
Body size is recognized as a major factor in evolutionary processes mediating sympatric diversificat...
A critical but poorly understood pattern in macroecology is the often unimodal species–body size dis...
Density-dependence is a term used in ecology to describe processes such as birth and death rates tha...
Abstract The assumption of an ecological limit to the number of species in a given region is frequen...
van Benthem K, Wittmann M. Density dependence on multiple spatial scales maintains spatial variation...
International audienceHow ecological interactions, genetic processes and environmental variability j...
Density-dependent processes often occur in ecological fields. In this paper, we propose a model for ...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
Body size is recognized as a major factor in evolutionary processes mediating sympatric diversificat...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
International audience1. Indirect biotic interactions-such as intransitive competition-are increasin...
A fundamental goal of ecology is to reveal generalities in the myriad types of interactions among sp...
A critical but poorly understood pattern in macroecology is the often unimodal species - body size d...
Indirect biotic interactions—such as intransitive competition—are increasingly recognized as being i...
If two species live on a single resource, the one with a slight advantage will out-compete the other...
Body size is recognized as a major factor in evolutionary processes mediating sympatric diversificat...
A critical but poorly understood pattern in macroecology is the often unimodal species–body size dis...
Density-dependence is a term used in ecology to describe processes such as birth and death rates tha...
Abstract The assumption of an ecological limit to the number of species in a given region is frequen...
van Benthem K, Wittmann M. Density dependence on multiple spatial scales maintains spatial variation...
International audienceHow ecological interactions, genetic processes and environmental variability j...
Density-dependent processes often occur in ecological fields. In this paper, we propose a model for ...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
Body size is recognized as a major factor in evolutionary processes mediating sympatric diversificat...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
International audience1. Indirect biotic interactions-such as intransitive competition-are increasin...
A fundamental goal of ecology is to reveal generalities in the myriad types of interactions among sp...
A critical but poorly understood pattern in macroecology is the often unimodal species - body size d...
Indirect biotic interactions—such as intransitive competition—are increasingly recognized as being i...
If two species live on a single resource, the one with a slight advantage will out-compete the other...
Body size is recognized as a major factor in evolutionary processes mediating sympatric diversificat...
A critical but poorly understood pattern in macroecology is the often unimodal species–body size dis...