Aim The need to forecast range shifts under future climate change has motivated an increasing interest in better understanding the role of biotic interactions in driving diversity patterns. The contribution of biotic interactions to shaping broad-scale species distributions is, however, still debated, partly due to the difficulty of detecting their effects. We aim to test whether spatial exclusion between potentially competing species can be detected at the species range scale, and whether this pattern relates to fine-scale mechanisms of coexistence. Location Western Palearctic. Methods We develop and evaluate a measure of geographic avoidance that uses outputs of species distribution models to quantify geographic exclusion pattern...
© 2015 by The University of Chicago. Predicting changes in species’ distributions is a crucial probl...
Understanding the limits to species ranges and distributions remains a difficult and long-standing p...
Species' geographic ranges could primarily be physiological tolerances drawn in space. Alternatively...
Aim: The need to forecast range shifts under future climate change has motivated an increasing inter...
A better comprehension of how natural systems will respond to global environmental changes requires ...
A central tenet of ecology and biogeography is that the broad outlines of species ranges are determi...
Ecological communities are assembled from the overlapping of species in geographic space, but the me...
Parapatry describes a geographic pattern in which the ranges of two species have separate but contig...
One of the key problems in ecology is our need to anticipate the set of locations in which a species...
Predicting which species will occur together in the future, and where, remains one of the greatest c...
There is substantial controversy on whether species interactions (particularly competition) shape sp...
Disentangling the relative influence of the environment and biotic interactions in determining speci...
Broad-scale diversity patterns are the outcome of ecological and evolutionary processes that permit ...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
© 2015 by The University of Chicago. Predicting changes in species’ distributions is a crucial probl...
Understanding the limits to species ranges and distributions remains a difficult and long-standing p...
Species' geographic ranges could primarily be physiological tolerances drawn in space. Alternatively...
Aim: The need to forecast range shifts under future climate change has motivated an increasing inter...
A better comprehension of how natural systems will respond to global environmental changes requires ...
A central tenet of ecology and biogeography is that the broad outlines of species ranges are determi...
Ecological communities are assembled from the overlapping of species in geographic space, but the me...
Parapatry describes a geographic pattern in which the ranges of two species have separate but contig...
One of the key problems in ecology is our need to anticipate the set of locations in which a species...
Predicting which species will occur together in the future, and where, remains one of the greatest c...
There is substantial controversy on whether species interactions (particularly competition) shape sp...
Disentangling the relative influence of the environment and biotic interactions in determining speci...
Broad-scale diversity patterns are the outcome of ecological and evolutionary processes that permit ...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
Whether biotic interactions limit geographic ranges has long been controversial, and traditional ana...
© 2015 by The University of Chicago. Predicting changes in species’ distributions is a crucial probl...
Understanding the limits to species ranges and distributions remains a difficult and long-standing p...
Species' geographic ranges could primarily be physiological tolerances drawn in space. Alternatively...