Quantitative studies of biotic homogenization can provide useful insights into conservation problems when used appropriately, but can be dangerously misleading when they are not. By separating the concept of biotic homogenization at the global scale from the study of biotic homogenization at spatially- and temporally-explicit scales, researchers can avoid many of the subtle pitfalls inherent in homogenization studies
Theories in population ecology and genetics are reviewed in the context of their application to biol...
Species–area relationships have been widely used to examine the latitudinal gradient in species dive...
Biotic homogenization is characterized as a process by which means species invasions and extinctions...
Ongoing species invasions and extinctions are changing biological diversity in different ways at dif...
homogenization is an increas-ingly common phrase used in discus-sions of the modern biodiversity cri...
In an era of global change, the process of biotic homogenisation by which regional biotas become mor...
In present times, there is a clear and growing need for applying theoretical biogeographic achieveme...
Biocultural homogenization entails interwoven losses of native biological and cultural diversity at ...
Compositional changes through local extinction and colonization are inherent to natural communities,...
Most conservation planning to date has focused on protecting today's biodiversity with the assumptio...
International audienceThe field of biodiversity conservation has recently been criticized as relying...
Most conservation planning to date has focused on protecting today's biodiversity with the assumptio...
The dilemma of conservation practice lies in weighing the urgency for action against the need for su...
This book is the first of its kind to describe the challenges that arise in studying and conserving ...
Conservation biology can benefit greatly from models that relate species' distributions to their env...
Theories in population ecology and genetics are reviewed in the context of their application to biol...
Species–area relationships have been widely used to examine the latitudinal gradient in species dive...
Biotic homogenization is characterized as a process by which means species invasions and extinctions...
Ongoing species invasions and extinctions are changing biological diversity in different ways at dif...
homogenization is an increas-ingly common phrase used in discus-sions of the modern biodiversity cri...
In an era of global change, the process of biotic homogenisation by which regional biotas become mor...
In present times, there is a clear and growing need for applying theoretical biogeographic achieveme...
Biocultural homogenization entails interwoven losses of native biological and cultural diversity at ...
Compositional changes through local extinction and colonization are inherent to natural communities,...
Most conservation planning to date has focused on protecting today's biodiversity with the assumptio...
International audienceThe field of biodiversity conservation has recently been criticized as relying...
Most conservation planning to date has focused on protecting today's biodiversity with the assumptio...
The dilemma of conservation practice lies in weighing the urgency for action against the need for su...
This book is the first of its kind to describe the challenges that arise in studying and conserving ...
Conservation biology can benefit greatly from models that relate species' distributions to their env...
Theories in population ecology and genetics are reviewed in the context of their application to biol...
Species–area relationships have been widely used to examine the latitudinal gradient in species dive...
Biotic homogenization is characterized as a process by which means species invasions and extinctions...