1. Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decrease with increasing census interval when obtained from censuses of non-homogeneous populations. This census interval effect could be confounding or perhaps even driving conclusions from comparative studies involving such rate estimates. correction methods and re-assess some previously published conclusions about forest dynamics. Latin America, Asia and Australia were used as subpopulations to simulate stand-level mortality rates in a heterogeneous population when census intervals varied: all sites showed decreasing stand mortality rates with increasing census interval length. plots from Africa, Latin America, Asia and Australia also showed t...
As population-level patterns of interest in forests emerge from individual vital rates, modelling fo...
Rates of change in tree communities following major disturbances are determined by a complex set of ...
Disturbances, such as extreme weather events, fires, floods, and biotic agents, can have strong impa...
1 Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decre...
Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decreas...
1 The methods commonly used to estimate stem turnover rates (i.e. mortality and recruitment) in spec...
Blackwell Publishing, Ltd.Tropical forest tree mortality, recruitment and turnover rates: calculatio...
Blackwell Publishing, Ltd.Tropical forest tree mortality, recruitment and turnover rates: calculatio...
1.Mortality and recruitment rates are fundamental measures of population dynamics. Ecologists and ot...
There is widespread interest in ensuring that assessment and knowledge of changes in forest biomass,...
This study was designed to explicitly formulate the effect of census interval and plot size on the v...
Tree turnover rates were assessed at 40 tropical forest sites. Averaged across inventoried forests,...
1. Organisms of all species must balance their allocation to growth, survival and recruitment. Among...
Lloyd et al. (2009) question the methods, concepts and conclusions of Fisher et al. (2008). We addre...
Organisms of all species must balance their allocation to growth, survival and recruitment. Among tr...
As population-level patterns of interest in forests emerge from individual vital rates, modelling fo...
Rates of change in tree communities following major disturbances are determined by a complex set of ...
Disturbances, such as extreme weather events, fires, floods, and biotic agents, can have strong impa...
1 Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decre...
Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decreas...
1 The methods commonly used to estimate stem turnover rates (i.e. mortality and recruitment) in spec...
Blackwell Publishing, Ltd.Tropical forest tree mortality, recruitment and turnover rates: calculatio...
Blackwell Publishing, Ltd.Tropical forest tree mortality, recruitment and turnover rates: calculatio...
1.Mortality and recruitment rates are fundamental measures of population dynamics. Ecologists and ot...
There is widespread interest in ensuring that assessment and knowledge of changes in forest biomass,...
This study was designed to explicitly formulate the effect of census interval and plot size on the v...
Tree turnover rates were assessed at 40 tropical forest sites. Averaged across inventoried forests,...
1. Organisms of all species must balance their allocation to growth, survival and recruitment. Among...
Lloyd et al. (2009) question the methods, concepts and conclusions of Fisher et al. (2008). We addre...
Organisms of all species must balance their allocation to growth, survival and recruitment. Among tr...
As population-level patterns of interest in forests emerge from individual vital rates, modelling fo...
Rates of change in tree communities following major disturbances are determined by a complex set of ...
Disturbances, such as extreme weather events, fires, floods, and biotic agents, can have strong impa...