Understanding how animals interact with their environment is critical for evaluating, mitigating and coping with anthropogenic alteration of Earth's biosphere. Researchers have attempted to understand some aspects of these interactions by examining patterns in animal body mass distributions. Energetic, phylogenetic, biogeographical, textural discontinuity and community interaction hypotheses have been advanced to explain observed patterns. Energetic and textural discontinuity hypotheses focus upon the allometry of resource use. The community interaction hypothesis contends that biotic interactions within assemblages of species are of primary importance. Biogeographical and phylogenetic hypotheses focus on the role of constraints on the orga...
1. In community and population ecology, there is a chronic gap between the classic Eltonian ecology ...
Abstract. Scaling relationships between mean body masses and abundances of species in multitrophic c...
247 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984.Investigators have sometimes ...
Understanding how animals interact with their environment is critical for evaluating, mitigating and...
Historically, ecology has focused on continuous distributions and smooth transitions. Only recently ...
Body size has long been hypothesized to play a major role in community structure and dynamics. Two g...
Macroecology is a way of thinking, exploring, and asking questions about complex ecological phenomen...
A number of common themes run throughout this volume. First, one begins to appreciate just how much ...
Large species generally occur at lower population densities than small species but, being larger, us...
The Energetic Equivalence Rule (EER) is a controversial issue in ecology. This rule states that the ...
Ecological variability, both across space and through time, plays a critical role in maintaining the...
Benthic ecologists have studied the distribution of animal body sizes because it is a form of 'taxon...
1. The power-law dependence of metabolic rate on body mass has major implications at every level of ...
Scale-specific patterns of resource distribution on landscapes entrain attributes of resident animal...
Humans have modified species distributions in most of the world's natural ecosystems. Analyses of sp...
1. In community and population ecology, there is a chronic gap between the classic Eltonian ecology ...
Abstract. Scaling relationships between mean body masses and abundances of species in multitrophic c...
247 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984.Investigators have sometimes ...
Understanding how animals interact with their environment is critical for evaluating, mitigating and...
Historically, ecology has focused on continuous distributions and smooth transitions. Only recently ...
Body size has long been hypothesized to play a major role in community structure and dynamics. Two g...
Macroecology is a way of thinking, exploring, and asking questions about complex ecological phenomen...
A number of common themes run throughout this volume. First, one begins to appreciate just how much ...
Large species generally occur at lower population densities than small species but, being larger, us...
The Energetic Equivalence Rule (EER) is a controversial issue in ecology. This rule states that the ...
Ecological variability, both across space and through time, plays a critical role in maintaining the...
Benthic ecologists have studied the distribution of animal body sizes because it is a form of 'taxon...
1. The power-law dependence of metabolic rate on body mass has major implications at every level of ...
Scale-specific patterns of resource distribution on landscapes entrain attributes of resident animal...
Humans have modified species distributions in most of the world's natural ecosystems. Analyses of sp...
1. In community and population ecology, there is a chronic gap between the classic Eltonian ecology ...
Abstract. Scaling relationships between mean body masses and abundances of species in multitrophic c...
247 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984.Investigators have sometimes ...