Aim Community phylogenetic studies use information about the evolutionary relationships of species to understand the ecological processes of community assembly. A central premise of the field is that the evolution of species maps onto ecological patterns, and phylogeny reveals something more than species traits alone about the ecological mechanisms structuring communities, such as environmental filtering, competition, and facilitation. We argue, therefore, that there is a need for better understanding and modelling of the interaction of phylogeny with species traits and community composition. Innovation We outline a new approach that identifies clades that are ecophylogenetically clustered or overdispersed and assesses whether those clades...
International audienceIn a recent forum article (“On the need for phylogenetic ‘corrections’ in func...
Quantifying the diversity of life, the processes that generate and maintain it, and the effects it h...
Phylogenetic structure measures patterns of evolutionary history within communities – are some commu...
Aim. Community phylogenetic studies use information about species' evolutionary relationships to und...
Taxa co-occurring in communities often represent a non-random sample, in phenotypic or phylogenetic ...
Recent progress in the development of phylogenetic methods and access to molecular phylogenies has m...
The trend of closely related taxa to retain similar environmental preferences mediated by inherited ...
Assemblage-level studies of mean trait variation are common in macroecology. However, how phylogenet...
The research presented here lies at the intersection of phylogeography, phylogenetics, and community...
Assemblage-level studies of mean trait variation are common in macroecology. However, how phylogenet...
Assemblage-level studies of mean trait variation are common in macroecology. However, how phylogenet...
1. It is now commonplace in community ecology to assess patterns of phylogenetic or functional diver...
© 2017 The Authors. Methods in Ecology and Evolution © 2017 British Ecological Society A growing num...
Phylogenetic structure measures patterns of evolutionary history within communities – are some commu...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137626/1/evo05703.pd
International audienceIn a recent forum article (“On the need for phylogenetic ‘corrections’ in func...
Quantifying the diversity of life, the processes that generate and maintain it, and the effects it h...
Phylogenetic structure measures patterns of evolutionary history within communities – are some commu...
Aim. Community phylogenetic studies use information about species' evolutionary relationships to und...
Taxa co-occurring in communities often represent a non-random sample, in phenotypic or phylogenetic ...
Recent progress in the development of phylogenetic methods and access to molecular phylogenies has m...
The trend of closely related taxa to retain similar environmental preferences mediated by inherited ...
Assemblage-level studies of mean trait variation are common in macroecology. However, how phylogenet...
The research presented here lies at the intersection of phylogeography, phylogenetics, and community...
Assemblage-level studies of mean trait variation are common in macroecology. However, how phylogenet...
Assemblage-level studies of mean trait variation are common in macroecology. However, how phylogenet...
1. It is now commonplace in community ecology to assess patterns of phylogenetic or functional diver...
© 2017 The Authors. Methods in Ecology and Evolution © 2017 British Ecological Society A growing num...
Phylogenetic structure measures patterns of evolutionary history within communities – are some commu...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137626/1/evo05703.pd
International audienceIn a recent forum article (“On the need for phylogenetic ‘corrections’ in func...
Quantifying the diversity of life, the processes that generate and maintain it, and the effects it h...
Phylogenetic structure measures patterns of evolutionary history within communities – are some commu...