Ecological studies may produce presence-absence data sets for different taxonomic groups, with varying spatial resolution and temporal coverage. Comparisons of these data are needed to extract meaningful information on the background ecological factors explaining community patterns, to improve our understanding of how beta diversity and its components vary among communities and biogeographical regions, and to reveal their possible implications for biodiversity conservation. A methodological difficulty is that the number of sampling units may be unequal: no method has been designed as yet to compare data matrices in such cases. The problem is solved by converting presence-absence data matrices to simplex plots based on the decomposition of J...
Biodiversity is determined by a myriad of complex processes acting at different scales. Given the cu...
Whittaker first proposed to measure the variation in species composition among plots or -diversity a...
Aim Community ecologists often compare assemblages. Alternatively, one may compare species distribut...
We describe a procedure for evaluating the relative importance of beta diversity, nestedness, and si...
Multiple-site dissimilarity may be caused by two opposite processes of meta-community organization, ...
Biodiversity provides support for life, vital provisions, regulating services and has positive cultu...
Our aim was to investigate species co-occurrence patterns in a large number of published biotic comm...
1. Joint species distribution models (JSDMs) account for biotic interactions and missing environment...
Biogeographical regions (geographically distinct assemblages of species and communities) consti-tute...
Community structure as summarized by presence⁻absence data is often evaluated via diversity me...
1. Identifying the boundary of a species' niche from observational and environmental data is a commo...
Understanding how habitat structures species assemblages in a community is one of the main goals of ...
An information tradeoff exists between systematic presence/absence surveys and purely opportunistic ...
We present a method for assessing similarity between species maps of presence and absence or abundan...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species s...
Biodiversity is determined by a myriad of complex processes acting at different scales. Given the cu...
Whittaker first proposed to measure the variation in species composition among plots or -diversity a...
Aim Community ecologists often compare assemblages. Alternatively, one may compare species distribut...
We describe a procedure for evaluating the relative importance of beta diversity, nestedness, and si...
Multiple-site dissimilarity may be caused by two opposite processes of meta-community organization, ...
Biodiversity provides support for life, vital provisions, regulating services and has positive cultu...
Our aim was to investigate species co-occurrence patterns in a large number of published biotic comm...
1. Joint species distribution models (JSDMs) account for biotic interactions and missing environment...
Biogeographical regions (geographically distinct assemblages of species and communities) consti-tute...
Community structure as summarized by presence⁻absence data is often evaluated via diversity me...
1. Identifying the boundary of a species' niche from observational and environmental data is a commo...
Understanding how habitat structures species assemblages in a community is one of the main goals of ...
An information tradeoff exists between systematic presence/absence surveys and purely opportunistic ...
We present a method for assessing similarity between species maps of presence and absence or abundan...
This is the published version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Species s...
Biodiversity is determined by a myriad of complex processes acting at different scales. Given the cu...
Whittaker first proposed to measure the variation in species composition among plots or -diversity a...
Aim Community ecologists often compare assemblages. Alternatively, one may compare species distribut...