The number of individuals, or the abundance, of a species in an area is a fundamental ecological parameter and a critical consideration when making management and conservation decisions (Andrewartha and Birch 1954; Krebs 1978; Gaston 1994; Caughley and Gunn 1996). However, unless the scale is very fine or localized (e.g., in a measurable habitat or a forest stand), abundance is not readily determined. At coarse or regional scales for many species, information on commonness and rarity is, at best, limited to a map of their presence or absence from recording units in a specified time frame. Various species data at large scales are increasingly documented in this presence/absence forma
1. High-quality abundance data is expensive and time consuming to collect and often highly limited i...
Species abundance distributions (SADs) follow one of ecology's oldest and most universal laws - ever...
The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence bu...
The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence bu...
The hollow curve species abundance distribution describes the pattern of large numbers of rare speci...
One of the most commonly observed patterns in ecology is the fact that at most locations there are a...
One of the most commonly observed patterns in ecology is the fact that at most locations there are a...
International audienceThe total number of co-occurring species (" true species richness ") and the w...
International audienceThe total number of co-occurring species (" true species richness ") and the w...
The universal observation that some species in an ecological community are common, but many more are...
International audienceThe total number of co-occurring species (" true species richness ") and the w...
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Aim: Data on species occurrences are far more common than data on speci...
In recent years, there has been increasing interest in modelling of species abundance data in additi...
Species abundance distributions (SADs) follow one of ecology's oldest and most universal laws - ever...
The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence bu...
1. High-quality abundance data is expensive and time consuming to collect and often highly limited i...
Species abundance distributions (SADs) follow one of ecology's oldest and most universal laws - ever...
The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence bu...
The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence bu...
The hollow curve species abundance distribution describes the pattern of large numbers of rare speci...
One of the most commonly observed patterns in ecology is the fact that at most locations there are a...
One of the most commonly observed patterns in ecology is the fact that at most locations there are a...
International audienceThe total number of co-occurring species (" true species richness ") and the w...
International audienceThe total number of co-occurring species (" true species richness ") and the w...
The universal observation that some species in an ecological community are common, but many more are...
International audienceThe total number of co-occurring species (" true species richness ") and the w...
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Aim: Data on species occurrences are far more common than data on speci...
In recent years, there has been increasing interest in modelling of species abundance data in additi...
Species abundance distributions (SADs) follow one of ecology's oldest and most universal laws - ever...
The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence bu...
1. High-quality abundance data is expensive and time consuming to collect and often highly limited i...
Species abundance distributions (SADs) follow one of ecology's oldest and most universal laws - ever...
The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence bu...