Patterns of species turnover may reflect the processes driving community dynamics across scales. While the majority of studies on species turnover have examined pairwise comparison metrics (e.g., the average Jaccard dissimilarity), it has been proposed that the species-area relationship (SAR) also offers insight into patterns of species turnover because these two patterns may be analytically linked. However, these previous links only apply in a special case where turnover is scale invariant, and we demonstrate across three different plant communities that over 90% of the pairwise turnover values are larger than expected based on scale-invariant predictions from the SAR. Furthermore, the degree of scale dependence in turnover was negatively ...
A long-standing observation in community ecology is that the scaling of species richness, as exempli...
The species Á/time relationship (STR) describes how the species richness of a community increases wi...
Regional species diversity generally increases with primary productivity whereas local diversity–pro...
The species-area relationship (SAR) plays a central role in biodiversity research, and recent work h...
A long-standing observation in community ecology is that the scaling of species richness, as exempli...
Understanding how species distribution (occupancy and spatial autocorrelation) and association (that...
Species distributions are commonly measured as the number of sites, or geographic grid cells occupie...
The Species–Area Relation (SAR), which describes the increase in the number of species S with increa...
Natural ecosystems are characterized by striking diversity of form and functions and yet exhibit dee...
The species-time relationship (STR) describes how the species richness of a community increases with...
The species–time relationship (STR) describes how the species richness of a community increases wit...
We are very grateful to all the volunteers who have contributed to the BBS. Yuan was funded by EPSRC...
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and ...
A long-standing observation in community ecology is that the scaling of species richness, as exempli...
The species Á/time relationship (STR) describes how the species richness of a community increases wi...
Regional species diversity generally increases with primary productivity whereas local diversity–pro...
The species-area relationship (SAR) plays a central role in biodiversity research, and recent work h...
A long-standing observation in community ecology is that the scaling of species richness, as exempli...
Understanding how species distribution (occupancy and spatial autocorrelation) and association (that...
Species distributions are commonly measured as the number of sites, or geographic grid cells occupie...
The Species–Area Relation (SAR), which describes the increase in the number of species S with increa...
Natural ecosystems are characterized by striking diversity of form and functions and yet exhibit dee...
The species-time relationship (STR) describes how the species richness of a community increases with...
The species–time relationship (STR) describes how the species richness of a community increases wit...
We are very grateful to all the volunteers who have contributed to the BBS. Yuan was funded by EPSRC...
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and ...
A long-standing observation in community ecology is that the scaling of species richness, as exempli...
The species Á/time relationship (STR) describes how the species richness of a community increases wi...
Regional species diversity generally increases with primary productivity whereas local diversity–pro...