Can Ecological Interactions be Inferred from Spatial Data?
暂无分享,去创建一个
Christopher R. Stephens | Pablo A. Marquet | Constantino González-Salazar | Maricarmen Villalobos | P. Marquet | C. González-Salazar | C. Stephens | M. Villalobos | C. González‐Salazar
[1] Adrian Chappell,et al. Fertilizing the Amazon and equatorial Atlantic with West African dust , 2010 .
[2] James Rosindell,et al. Unified neutral theory of biodiversity and biogeography , 2010, Scholarpedia.
[3] J. Berger. Statistical Decision Theory and Bayesian Analysis , 1988 .
[4] Robert P. Anderson,et al. Maximum entropy modeling of species geographic distributions , 2006 .
[5] N. Gotelli. Null model analysis of species co-occurrence patterns , 2000 .
[6] J. Lobo,et al. Historical bias in biodiversity inventories affects the observed environmental niche of the species , 2008 .
[7] James H. Brown,et al. Assembly Rules and Competition in Desert Rodents , 2002, The American Naturalist.
[8] V. Sánchez‐Cordero,et al. Leishmania (L.) mexicana Infected Bats in Mexico: Novel Potential Reservoirs , 2015, PLoS neglected tropical diseases.
[9] W. D. Kissling,et al. The role of biotic interactions in shaping distributions and realised assemblages of species: implications for species distribution modelling , 2012, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.
[10] E. B. Wilson. Probable Inference, the Law of Succession, and Statistical Inference , 1927 .
[11] Jorge Soberón,et al. Niches and distributional areas: Concepts, methods, and assumptions , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[12] M. Emmerson,et al. MEASUREMENT OF INTERACTION STRENGTH IN NATURE , 2005 .
[13] Daniel Simberloff,et al. The Assembly of Species Communities: Chance or Competition? , 1979 .
[14] V. Sánchez‐Cordero,et al. Can You Judge a Disease Host by the Company It Keeps? Predicting Disease Hosts and Their Relative Importance: A Case Study for Leishmaniasis , 2016, PLoS neglected tropical diseases.
[15] David W. Winkler,et al. 20. A Null Model for Null Models in Biogeography , 1984 .
[16] Raúl Sierra-Alcocer,et al. Exploratory analysis of the interrelations between co-located boolean spatial features using network graphs , 2012, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..
[17] David R. B. Stockwell,et al. Competitive interactions between felid species may limit the southern distribution of bobcats Lynx rufus , 2008 .
[18] James S. Clark,et al. Generalized joint attribute modeling for biodiversity analysis: median-zero, multivariate, multifarious data , 2017 .
[19] A. B. Hill. The Environment and Disease: Association or Causation? , 1965, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine.
[20] J. Elith,et al. Species Distribution Models: Ecological Explanation and Prediction Across Space and Time , 2009 .
[21] P. Marquet,et al. Comparing the relative contributions of biotic and abiotic factors as mediators of species’ distributions , 2013 .
[22] Dominique Gravel,et al. A theory for species co-occurrence in interaction networks , 2015, Theoretical Ecology.
[23] M. Luoto,et al. Biotic interactions improve prediction of boreal bird distributions at macro‐scales , 2007 .
[24] Sonia Kéfi,et al. An Open-System Approach to Complex Biological Networks , 2019, SIAM J. Appl. Math..
[25] G. C. Costa,et al. The importance of biotic interactions in species distribution models: a test of the Eltonian noise hypothesis using parrots , 2014 .
[26] R. Arditi,et al. Coupling in predator-prey dynamics: Ratio-Dependence , 1989 .
[27] C. E. Gehlke,et al. Certain Effects of Grouping upon the Size of the Correlation Coefficient in Census Tract Material , 1934 .
[28] Miguel B. Araújo,et al. Using species co-occurrence networks to assess the impacts of climate change , 2011 .
[29] M. Aranda,et al. ANÁLISIS COMPARATIVO DE LA ALIMENTACIÓN DEL GATO MONTÉS (LYNX RUFUS) EN DOS DIFERENTES AMBIENTES DE MÉXICO , 2002, ACTA ZOOLÓGICA MEXICANA (N.S.).
[30] J. Snow. On the Mode of Communication of Cholera , 1856, Edinburgh medical journal.
[31] Donald B. Rubin,et al. Bayesian Inference for Causal Effects: The Role of Randomization , 1978 .
[32] D. Sánchez‐Fernández,et al. Can we disentangle predator-prey interactions from species distributions at a macro-scale? A case study with a raptor species. , 2013 .
[33] J. C. de Almeida,et al. Concluding Remarks , 2015, Clinical practice and epidemiology in mental health : CP & EMH.
[34] N. Golding,et al. Tracking the distribution and impacts of diseases with biological records and distribution modelling , 2015 .
[35] V. Sánchez‐Cordero,et al. Predicting the Potential Role of Non-human Hosts in Zika Virus Maintenance , 2017, EcoHealth.
[36] Charles C. Elton. Animal Ecology , 1927, Nature.
[37] C. S. Holling. Some Characteristics of Simple Types of Predation and Parasitism , 1959, The Canadian Entomologist.
[38] F ChenStanley,et al. An Empirical Study of Smoothing Techniques for Language Modeling , 1996, ACL.
[39] W. Z. Lidicker,et al. A Clarification of Interactions in Ecological Systems , 1979 .
[40] G. F. Gause,et al. EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF VITO VOLTERRA'S MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF THE STRUGGLE FOR EXISTENCE. , 1934, Science.
[41] V. Sánchez‐Cordero,et al. Trypanosoma cruzi reservoir—triatomine vector co-occurrence networks reveal meta-community effects by synanthropic mammals on geographic dispersal , 2017, PeerJ.
[42] P. Marquet,et al. Species co-occurrence networks: Can they reveal trophic and non-trophic interactions in ecological communities? , 2018, Ecology.
[43] R. Macarthur,et al. The Limiting Similarity, Convergence, and Divergence of Coexisting Species , 1967, The American Naturalist.
[44] D. Hannah,et al. Shared environmental responses drive co‐occurrence patterns in river bird communities , 2016 .
[45] Christopher R. Stephens,et al. Using Biotic Interaction Networks for Prediction in Biodiversity and Emerging Diseases , 2008, PloS one.
[46] M. Gilpin. Limit Cycles in Competition Communities , 1975, The American Naturalist.
[47] D. Rubin. Estimating causal effects of treatments in randomized and nonrandomized studies. , 1974 .
[48] Christopher R. Stephens,et al. When is the Naive Bayes approximation not so naive? , 2018, Machine Learning.
[49] P. Phillips. Epistasis — the essential role of gene interactions in the structure and evolution of genetic systems , 2008, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[50] M. Gilpin,et al. Global models of growth and competition. , 1973, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[51] L. Rodríguez-Martínez,et al. A comparison between vegetation and diet records from the wet and dry season in the cottontail rabbitSylvilagus floridanus at Ixtacuixtla, central Mexico , 2010, Acta Theriologica.
[52] Annette Ostling,et al. On Theory in Ecology , 2014 .
[53] Otso Ovaskainen,et al. Modeling species co-occurrence by multivariate logistic regression generates new hypotheses on fungal interactions. , 2010, Ecology.
[54] Alan Roberts,et al. Island-sharing by archipelago species , 2004, Oecologia.
[55] W. Godsoe,et al. How do species interactions affect species distribution models , 2012 .
[56] J. Morrone,et al. Understanding transmissibility patterns of Chagas disease through complex vector–host networks , 2017, Parasitology.
[57] Shyam Visweswaran,et al. The application of naive Bayes model averaging to predict Alzheimer's disease from genome-wide data , 2011, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..
[58] L. Bender,et al. Use of prey by sympatric bobcat (Lynx rufus) and coyote (Canis latrans) in the Izta-Popo National Park, Mexico , 2014 .
[59] Laura J. Pollock,et al. Understanding co‐occurrence by modelling species simultaneously with a Joint Species Distribution Model (JSDM) , 2014 .
[60] A. Peterson,et al. Biodiversity informatics: managing and applying primary biodiversity data. , 2004, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.
[61] T. Schoener,et al. Competition and the form of habitat shift. , 1974, Theoretical population biology.
[62] Sydne Record,et al. Empirical Evidence for the Scale Dependence of Biotic Interactions , 2015 .
[63] M. Plank,et al. Effects of biotic interactions and dispersal on the presence-absence of multiple species , 2017 .
[64] A. Peterson,et al. Major challenges for correlational ecological niche model projections to future climate conditions , 2018, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[65] Juan M. Barrios,et al. SPECIES: A platform for the exploration of ecological data , 2019, Ecology and evolution.
[66] P. Marquet,et al. Inferring species roles in metacommunity structure from species co-occurrence networks , 2014, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[67] A. Peterson,et al. INTERPRETATION OF MODELS OF FUNDAMENTAL ECOLOGICAL NICHES AND SPECIES' DISTRIBUTIONAL AREAS , 2005 .
[68] A. Peterson,et al. No silver bullets in correlative ecological niche modelling: insights from testing among many potential algorithms for niche estimation , 2015 .
[69] M. Rosenzweig,et al. Detecting interspecific competition in the field: testing the regression method , 1986 .
[70] Patrick S. Broos,et al. A NAIVE BAYES SOURCE CLASSIFIER FOR X-RAY SOURCES , 2011, 1102.5120.
[71] T. Case,et al. Invasion resistance arises in strongly interacting species-rich model competition communities. , 1990, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[72] A. B. Hill,et al. "The Environment and Disease: Association or Causation?" (1965), by Austin Bradford Hill , 2017 .
[73] M. Delibes,et al. Seasonal food habits of bobcats (Lynx rufus) in subtropical Baja California Sur, Mexico , 1997 .
[74] Christopher R. Stephens,et al. Bayesian Inference of Ecological Interactions from Spatial Data , 2017, Entropy.
[75] Burt P. Kotler,et al. Can interaction coefficients be determined from cencus data? , 1985, Oecologia.
[76] Don E. Wilson,et al. The Mammals of North America , 2002, Nature.
[77] P. Dayton,et al. Two Cases of Resource Partitioning in an Intertidal Community: Making the Right Prediction for the Wrong Reason , 1973, The American Naturalist.
[78] J. T. Major,et al. Interspecific relationships of coyotes, bobcats, and red foxes in western Maine , 1987 .
[79] A. Townsend Peterson,et al. Species distribution models for Peruvian plantcutter improve with consideration of biotic interactions , 2018 .
[80] C. González-Salazar,et al. Constructing Ecological Networks: A Tool to Infer Risk of Transmission and Dispersal of Leishmaniasis , 2012, Zoonoses and public health.
[81] Bin Wang,et al. Pacific–East Asian Teleconnection: How Does ENSO Affect East Asian Climate? , 2000 .
[82] Daniel Simberloff,et al. The checkered history of checkerboard distributions. , 2013, Ecology.
[83] David R. B. Stockwell,et al. The GARP modelling system: problems and solutions to automated spatial prediction , 1999, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..
[84] D. Rubin,et al. The central role of the propensity score in observational studies for causal effects , 1983 .
[85] Miroslav Dudík,et al. A maximum entropy approach to species distribution modeling , 2004, ICML.
[86] J. Álvarez‐Martínez,et al. Can Eltonian processes explain species distributions at large scale? A case study with Great Bustard (Otis tarda) , 2015 .
[87] Ayse Basar Bener,et al. Analysis of Naive Bayes' assumptions on software fault data: An empirical study , 2009, Data Knowl. Eng..
[88] Nicholas J. Gotelli,et al. SPECIES CO‐OCCURRENCE: A META‐ANALYSIS OF J. M. DIAMOND'S ASSEMBLY RULES MODEL , 2002 .
[89] Gary R. Graves,et al. Macroecological signals of species interactions in the Danish avifauna , 2010, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[90] A. Rozenfeld,et al. The geographic scaling of biotic interactions , 2013 .
[91] Illtyd Trethowan. Causality , 1938 .
[92] R. Paine,et al. Food-web analysis through field measurement of per capita interaction strength , 1992, Nature.
[93] Miguel G. Matias,et al. Inferring biotic interactions from proxies. , 2015, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[94] J. Olden,et al. Global change, global trade, and the next wave of plant invasions , 2012 .
[95] J. Tiedje,et al. Naïve Bayesian Classifier for Rapid Assignment of rRNA Sequences into the New Bacterial Taxonomy , 2007, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[96] William T. Langford,et al. Biodiversity and species interactions: extending Lotka-Volterra community theory , 2003 .
[97] J. Biesmeijer,et al. Improving species distribution models using biotic interactions: a case study of parasites, pollinators and plants , 2013 .