International audienceUnderstanding the patterns of spatial and temporal variations in animal abundance is a fundamental question in ecology. Here, we propose a method to quantify temporal variations in animal spatial patterns and to determine the spatial scale at which such temporal variability is expressed. The methodology extends from the approach proposed by Taylor (Taylor, L. R. 1961. Aggregation, variance and the mean. Nature 189: 732735) and relies on models of the relationship between temporal mean and variance in animal abundance. Repeated observations of the spatial distribution of populations are used to construct spatially explicit models of Taylor's power law. The resulting slope parameters of the Taylor power law provide local...
Colonial seabirds are relatively easy to observe, count, measure and manipulate, and consequently ha...
Many studies have shown recent climate-induced changes in species distributions (e.g. poleward range...
All marine organisms exhibit some degree of spatial autocorrelation, which is the tendency for high ...
International audienceUnderstanding the patterns of spatial and temporal variations in animal abunda...
The spatial distribution of foraging animals at a given time simultaneously depends on (1) exogenous...
Seabird abundance is an important indicator for assessing impact of human activities on the marine e...
To gain further insight into the foraging behaviour of predator species, it is essential that intera...
Understanding how seabirds use the marine environment is key for marine spatial planning, and maps o...
Quantifying the links between the marine environment, prey-occurrence, and predator distributionis t...
Population‐level estimates of species’ distributions can reveal fundamental ecological processes and...
Many attempts to relate animal foraging patterns to landscape heterogeneity are focused on the analy...
International audienceObtaining accurate maps of relative abundance is an objective that may be diff...
International audienceObtaining accurate maps of relative abundance is an objective that may be diffi...
This study analyzes the temporal variability/stability of the spatial distributions of key exploited...
This study analyzes the temporal variability/stability of the spatial distributions of key exploited...
Colonial seabirds are relatively easy to observe, count, measure and manipulate, and consequently ha...
Many studies have shown recent climate-induced changes in species distributions (e.g. poleward range...
All marine organisms exhibit some degree of spatial autocorrelation, which is the tendency for high ...
International audienceUnderstanding the patterns of spatial and temporal variations in animal abunda...
The spatial distribution of foraging animals at a given time simultaneously depends on (1) exogenous...
Seabird abundance is an important indicator for assessing impact of human activities on the marine e...
To gain further insight into the foraging behaviour of predator species, it is essential that intera...
Understanding how seabirds use the marine environment is key for marine spatial planning, and maps o...
Quantifying the links between the marine environment, prey-occurrence, and predator distributionis t...
Population‐level estimates of species’ distributions can reveal fundamental ecological processes and...
Many attempts to relate animal foraging patterns to landscape heterogeneity are focused on the analy...
International audienceObtaining accurate maps of relative abundance is an objective that may be diff...
International audienceObtaining accurate maps of relative abundance is an objective that may be diffi...
This study analyzes the temporal variability/stability of the spatial distributions of key exploited...
This study analyzes the temporal variability/stability of the spatial distributions of key exploited...
Colonial seabirds are relatively easy to observe, count, measure and manipulate, and consequently ha...
Many studies have shown recent climate-induced changes in species distributions (e.g. poleward range...
All marine organisms exhibit some degree of spatial autocorrelation, which is the tendency for high ...