1. Hubbell's 'Unified Neutral Theory of Biodiversity and Biogeography' (UNTB) has generated much controversy about both the realism of its assumptions and how well it describes the species abundance dynamics in real communities. 2. We fit a discrete-time version of Hubbell's neutral model to long-term macro-moth (Lepidoptera) community data from the Rothamsted Insect Survey (RIS) light-traps network in the United Kingdom. 3. We relax the assumption of constant community size and use a hierarchical Bayesian approach to show that the model does not fit the data well as it would need parameter values that are impossible. 4. This is because the ecological communities fluctuate more than expected under neutrality. 5. The model, as presented here...
Neutral models which assume ecological equivalence between species provide null models for community...
The zero-sum assumption is one of the ingredients of the standard neutral model of biodiversity by H...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
The Unified Neutral Theory of Biodiversity (UNTB), proposed as an alternative to niche theory, has b...
Environmental stochasticity is known to be a destabilizing factor, increasing abundance fluctuations...
Environmental stochasticity is known to be a destabilizing factor, increasing abundance fluctuations...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75650/1/j.1461-0248.2004.00640.x.pd
Neutral models and differential responses of species to environmental heterogeneity offer complement...
Neutral models and differential responses of species to environmental heterogeneity offer complement...
International audienceThe unified neutral model of biodiversity proposed by S. Hubbell is solved ana...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
Hubbell (2001) proposes that random demographic processes (i.e., neutral dynamics) can explain obser...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
Hubbell's 2001 neutral theory unifies biodiversity and biogeography by modelling steady-state distri...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
Neutral models which assume ecological equivalence between species provide null models for community...
The zero-sum assumption is one of the ingredients of the standard neutral model of biodiversity by H...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
The Unified Neutral Theory of Biodiversity (UNTB), proposed as an alternative to niche theory, has b...
Environmental stochasticity is known to be a destabilizing factor, increasing abundance fluctuations...
Environmental stochasticity is known to be a destabilizing factor, increasing abundance fluctuations...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75650/1/j.1461-0248.2004.00640.x.pd
Neutral models and differential responses of species to environmental heterogeneity offer complement...
Neutral models and differential responses of species to environmental heterogeneity offer complement...
International audienceThe unified neutral model of biodiversity proposed by S. Hubbell is solved ana...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
Hubbell (2001) proposes that random demographic processes (i.e., neutral dynamics) can explain obser...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
Hubbell's 2001 neutral theory unifies biodiversity and biogeography by modelling steady-state distri...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...
Neutral models which assume ecological equivalence between species provide null models for community...
The zero-sum assumption is one of the ingredients of the standard neutral model of biodiversity by H...
Species abundance distributions (SAD) are probably ecology's most well-known empirical pattern, and ...