1. Multiscale codependence analysis (MCA) quantifies the joint spatial distribution of a pair of variables in order to provide a spatially-explicit assessment of their relationships to one another. For the sake of simplicity, the original definition of MCA only considered a single response variable (e.g. a single species). However, that definition would limit the application of MCA when many response variables are studied jointly, for example when one wants to study the effect of the environment on the spatial organisation of a multi-species community in an explicit manner. 2. In the present paper, we generalize MCA to multiple response variables. We conducted a simulation study to assess the statistical properties (i.e. type I ...
1. Statistical modelling is often used to relate sparse biological survey data to remotely derived e...
Summary: 1. Attempts to infer underlying ecological process from observed patterns in ecology have...
Species distribution models (SDMs) project the outcome of community assembly processes - dispersal, ...
1. Multiscale codependence analysis (MCA) quantifies the joint spatial distribution of a pair of var...
1.Community-level models (CLMs) consider multiple, co-occurring species in model fitting and are les...
Here we describe how we obtained and analyzed data for the manuscript: High compositional dissimilar...
Direct gradient analyses in spatial genetics provide unique opportunities to describe the inherent c...
Accurately characterizing spatial patterns on landscapes is necessary to understand the processes th...
Environmental change research is plagued by the curse of dimensionality: the number of communities a...
The species-area relationship (SAR) has over a 150-year-long history in ecology, but how its shape a...
Perhaps the most widely used quantitative approach in metacommunity ecology is the estimation of the...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species s...
This is the accepted manuscript of an article published by Wiley.Question: What is the effect of dif...
Trait variation within populations is an important area of research for empirical and theoretical ec...
1. Statistical modelling is often used to relate sparse biological survey data to remotely derived e...
Summary: 1. Attempts to infer underlying ecological process from observed patterns in ecology have...
Species distribution models (SDMs) project the outcome of community assembly processes - dispersal, ...
1. Multiscale codependence analysis (MCA) quantifies the joint spatial distribution of a pair of var...
1.Community-level models (CLMs) consider multiple, co-occurring species in model fitting and are les...
Here we describe how we obtained and analyzed data for the manuscript: High compositional dissimilar...
Direct gradient analyses in spatial genetics provide unique opportunities to describe the inherent c...
Accurately characterizing spatial patterns on landscapes is necessary to understand the processes th...
Environmental change research is plagued by the curse of dimensionality: the number of communities a...
The species-area relationship (SAR) has over a 150-year-long history in ecology, but how its shape a...
Perhaps the most widely used quantitative approach in metacommunity ecology is the estimation of the...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species s...
This is the accepted manuscript of an article published by Wiley.Question: What is the effect of dif...
Trait variation within populations is an important area of research for empirical and theoretical ec...
1. Statistical modelling is often used to relate sparse biological survey data to remotely derived e...
Summary: 1. Attempts to infer underlying ecological process from observed patterns in ecology have...
Species distribution models (SDMs) project the outcome of community assembly processes - dispersal, ...