Some species have disproportionate influence on assemblage structure, given their numbers or biomass. Most examples of such "strong interactors'' come from small-scale experiments or from observations of the effects of invasive species. There is evidence that entire avian assemblages in open woodlands can be influenced strongly by individual species over very large areas in eastern Australia, with small-bodied species (2000 km). A series of linked Bayesian models was used to identify large-bodied (>= 50 g) bird species that were associated with changes in occurrence and abundance of small-bodied species. One native species, the Noisy Miner (Manorina melanocephala; family Meliphagidae), was objectively identified as the sole large-bodied spe...
Interspecific competition is an essential element of the evolution of species and can strongly influ...
Human-induced biotic homogenization resulting from landscape change and increased competition from w...
Assembly rules have been difficult to observe partly because species interactions vary with resource...
Aim: We explored whether one native bird (the yellow-throated miner Manorina flavigula) greatly affe...
Aim: We explored whether one native bird (the yellow-throated miner Manorina flavigula) greatly affe...
Accounting for differences in abundances among species remains a high priority for community ecology...
AimStrongly interacting species have disproportionately large ecological effects relative to their a...
The composition of many eastern Australian woodland and forest bird assemblages is controlled by a s...
Interspecific competition is an essential element of the evolution of species and can strongly influ...
We explored the effects of a purported 'reverse keystone species', the Noisy Miner (Manorina melanoc...
<div><p>Human-induced biotic homogenization resulting from landscape change and increased competitio...
Interspecific owever, empirical evidence of the resource availability competition is an essential el...
Interspecific competition is an essential element of the evolution of species and can strongly influ...
Human-induced biotic homogenization resulting from landscape change and increased competition from w...
Aim Much research has quantified species responses to human-modified ecosystems. However, there has ...
Interspecific competition is an essential element of the evolution of species and can strongly influ...
Human-induced biotic homogenization resulting from landscape change and increased competition from w...
Assembly rules have been difficult to observe partly because species interactions vary with resource...
Aim: We explored whether one native bird (the yellow-throated miner Manorina flavigula) greatly affe...
Aim: We explored whether one native bird (the yellow-throated miner Manorina flavigula) greatly affe...
Accounting for differences in abundances among species remains a high priority for community ecology...
AimStrongly interacting species have disproportionately large ecological effects relative to their a...
The composition of many eastern Australian woodland and forest bird assemblages is controlled by a s...
Interspecific competition is an essential element of the evolution of species and can strongly influ...
We explored the effects of a purported 'reverse keystone species', the Noisy Miner (Manorina melanoc...
<div><p>Human-induced biotic homogenization resulting from landscape change and increased competitio...
Interspecific owever, empirical evidence of the resource availability competition is an essential el...
Interspecific competition is an essential element of the evolution of species and can strongly influ...
Human-induced biotic homogenization resulting from landscape change and increased competition from w...
Aim Much research has quantified species responses to human-modified ecosystems. However, there has ...
Interspecific competition is an essential element of the evolution of species and can strongly influ...
Human-induced biotic homogenization resulting from landscape change and increased competition from w...
Assembly rules have been difficult to observe partly because species interactions vary with resource...