Accurately characterizing spatial patterns on landscapes is necessary to understand the processes that generate biodiversity, a problem that has applications in ecological theory, conservation planning, ecosystem restoration, and ecosystem management. However, the measurement of biodiversity patterns and the ecological and evolutionary processes that underlie those patterns is highly dependent on the study unit size, boundary placement, and number of observations. These issues, together known as the modifiable areal unit problem, are well known in geography. These factors limit the degree to which results from different metacommunity and macro-ecological studies can be compared to draw new inferences, and yet these types of comparisons are ...
The species-area relationship (SAR) has over a 150-year-long history in ecology, but how its shape a...
Dispersal, defined as the movement of individuals among local communities in a landscape, is a regio...
Successful ecosystem management depends upon accurate assessment of ecological conditions. Limited b...
Accurately characterizing spatial patterns on landscapes is necessary to understand the processes th...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species s...
1. Statistical modelling is often used to relate sparse biological survey data to remotely derived e...
The biodiversity of a habitat patch is predicted to be driven in part by interactions between patch ...
Environmental change research is plagued by the curse of dimensionality: the number of communities a...
Among-site variation in metacommunities (beta diversity) is typically correlated with the distance s...
1. Multiscale codependence analysis (MCA) quantifies the joint spatial distribution of a pair of var...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species p...
Summary: 1. Attempts to infer underlying ecological process from observed patterns in ecology have...
Context: Community composition, environmental variation, and spatial structuring can influence ecosy...
1.Community-level models (CLMs) consider multiple, co-occurring species in model fitting and are les...
Habitat fragmentation and land use changes are causing major biodiversity losses. Connectivity of th...
The species-area relationship (SAR) has over a 150-year-long history in ecology, but how its shape a...
Dispersal, defined as the movement of individuals among local communities in a landscape, is a regio...
Successful ecosystem management depends upon accurate assessment of ecological conditions. Limited b...
Accurately characterizing spatial patterns on landscapes is necessary to understand the processes th...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species s...
1. Statistical modelling is often used to relate sparse biological survey data to remotely derived e...
The biodiversity of a habitat patch is predicted to be driven in part by interactions between patch ...
Environmental change research is plagued by the curse of dimensionality: the number of communities a...
Among-site variation in metacommunities (beta diversity) is typically correlated with the distance s...
1. Multiscale codependence analysis (MCA) quantifies the joint spatial distribution of a pair of var...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species p...
Summary: 1. Attempts to infer underlying ecological process from observed patterns in ecology have...
Context: Community composition, environmental variation, and spatial structuring can influence ecosy...
1.Community-level models (CLMs) consider multiple, co-occurring species in model fitting and are les...
Habitat fragmentation and land use changes are causing major biodiversity losses. Connectivity of th...
The species-area relationship (SAR) has over a 150-year-long history in ecology, but how its shape a...
Dispersal, defined as the movement of individuals among local communities in a landscape, is a regio...
Successful ecosystem management depends upon accurate assessment of ecological conditions. Limited b...