Predictions and tests of climate‐based hypotheses of broad‐scale variation in taxonomic richness
暂无分享,去创建一个
Richard Field | Bradford A. Hawkins | Thierry Oberdorff | Jeremy T. Kerr | Dawn M. Kaufman | David J. Currie | Jean-François Guégan | J. Kerr | J. Guégan | B. A. Hawkins | G. Mittelbach | T. Oberdorff | D. Currie | J. Turner | Richard Field | H. Cornell | Gary G. Mittelbach | Eileen M. O'Brien | John Turner | Howard V. Cornell | B. Hawkins
[1] A. Hurlbert. Species–energy relationships and habitat complexity in bird communities , 2004 .
[2] M. Hochberg,et al. Ecology Drives the Worldwide Distribution of Human Diseases , 2004, PLoS biology.
[3] LATITUDINAL VARIATION IN GENETIC DIVERGENCE OF POPULATIONS AND THE POTENTIAL FOR FUTURE SPECIATION , 2004, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[4] Jérôme Chave,et al. Neutral theory and community ecology , 2004 .
[5] Richard Field,et al. ENERGY, WATER, AND BROAD‐SCALE GEOGRAPHIC PATTERNS OF SPECIES RICHNESS , 2003 .
[6] Dawn M. Kaufman,et al. LATITUDINAL GRADIENTS OF BIODIVERSITY:Pattern,Process,Scale,and Synthesis , 2003 .
[7] S. Venevsky,et al. Large-scale energetic and landscape factors of vegetation diversity , 2003 .
[8] D. Currie,et al. Does climate determine broad‐scale patterns of species richness? A test of the causal link by natural experiment , 2003 .
[9] D. H. Reed,et al. Estimates of minimum viable population sizes for vertebrates and factors influencing those estimates , 2003 .
[10] R. Rand,et al. Size‐dependent species richness: trends within plant communities and across latitude , 2003 .
[11] José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho,et al. PRODUCTIVITY AND HISTORY AS PREDICTORS OF THE LATITUDINAL DIVERSITY GRADIENT OF TERRESTRIAL BIRDS , 2003 .
[12] Kevin D. Janni. Global Patterns of Plant Diversity: Alwyn H. Gentry’s Forest Transect Data Set , 2003 .
[13] David J. Currie,et al. A Globally Consistent Richness‐Climate Relationship for Angiosperms , 2003, The American Naturalist.
[14] L. Bromham,et al. Testing the link between the latitudinal gradient in species richness and rates of molecular evolution , 2003, Journal of evolutionary biology.
[15] Thomas J. Stohlgren,et al. The rich get richer: patterns of plant invasions in the United States , 2003 .
[16] J. Diniz‐Filho,et al. Spatial autocorrelation and red herrings in geographical ecology , 2003 .
[17] G. Yohe,et al. A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change impacts across natural systems , 2003, Nature.
[18] Allen H Hurlbert,et al. The Effect of Energy and Seasonality on Avian Species Richness and Community Composition , 2002, The American Naturalist.
[19] James H Brown,et al. Species Invasions Exceed Extinctions on Islands Worldwide: A Comparative Study of Plants and Birds , 2002, The American Naturalist.
[20] Campbell O. Webb,et al. Phylogenies and Community Ecology , 2002 .
[21] James H. Brown,et al. Global Biodiversity, Biochemical Kinetics, and the Energetic-Equivalence Rule , 2002, Science.
[22] S. Culver,et al. Latitudinal difference in biodiversity caused by higher tropical rate of increase , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[23] J. Kerr,et al. Remotely sensed habitat diversity predicts butterfly species richness and community similarity in Canada , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[24] D. Forsyth,et al. High predictability in introduction outcomes and the geographical range size of introduced Australian birds: a role for climate , 2001 .
[25] S. Nee,et al. Phylogenetics and speciation. , 2001, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[26] D. Schluter. Ecology and the origin of species. , 2001, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[27] J. Smol,et al. Diatom, Pollen, and Chemical Evidence of Postglacial Climatic Change at Big Lake, South-Central British Columbia, Canada , 2001, Quaternary Research.
[28] Karl J. Niklas,et al. Invariant scaling relations across tree-dominated communities , 2001, Nature.
[29] D. Sax. Latitudinal gradients and geographic ranges of exotic species : implications for biogeography , 2001 .
[30] Bill Shipley,et al. Cause and Correlation in Biology: A User''s Guide to Path Analysis , 2016 .
[31] D. Schluter,et al. Analysis of an evolutionary species–area relationship , 2000, Nature.
[32] E. Williams,et al. The diversity and abundance of North American butterflies vary with habitat disturbance and geography , 2000 .
[33] Harold A. Mooney,et al. A global distribution of biodiversity inferred from climatic constraints: results from a process‐based modelling study , 2000 .
[34] Colwell,et al. The mid-domain effect: geometric constraints on the geography of species richness. , 2000, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[35] M. Ritchie. Evolution of Biological Diversity , 1999, Heredity.
[36] M. Cardillo. Latitude and rates of diversification in birds and butterflies , 1999, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[37] C. Parmesan,et al. Poleward shifts in geographical ranges of butterfly species associated with regional warming , 1999, Nature.
[38] C. Benkman. The Selection Mosaic and Diversifying Coevolution between Crossbills and Lodgepole Pine , 1999, The American Naturalist.
[39] Thomas J. Stohlgren,et al. EXOTIC PLANT SPECIES INVADE HOT SPOTS OF NATIVE PLANT DIVERSITY , 1999 .
[40] J. Kerr,et al. The relative importance of evolutionary and environmental controls on broad-scale patterns of species richness in North America , 1999 .
[41] J. Lawton,et al. Why More Productive Sites Have More Species: An Experimental Test of Theory Using Tree‐Hole Communities , 1998, The American Naturalist.
[42] Christopher N. Johnson. Rarity in the tropics: latitudinal gradients in distribution and abundance in Australian mammals , 1998 .
[43] T. Blackburn,et al. Rapoport's rule: time for an epitaph? , 1998, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[44] Sovan Lek,et al. Energy availability and habitat heterogeneity predict global riverine fish diversity , 1998, Nature.
[45] J. Kerr,et al. Lepidopteran richness patterns in North America , 1998 .
[46] J. Thompson. EVALUATING THE DYNAMICS OF COEVOLUTION AMONG GEOGRAPHICALLY STRUCTURED POPULATIONS , 1997 .
[47] J. Guégan,et al. Is there an influence of historical events on contemporary fish species richness in rivers? Comparisons between Western Europe and North America , 1997 .
[48] S. Hubbell,et al. A unified theory of biogeography and relative species abundance and its application to tropical rain forests and coral reefs , 1997, Coral Reefs.
[49] W. Link,et al. The North American Breeding Bird Survey Results and Analysis , 1997 .
[50] Jeremy T. Kerr,et al. Habitat heterogeneity as a determinant of mammal species richness in high-energy regions , 1997, Nature.
[51] R. Fraser,et al. The Species Richness-Energy Hypothesis in a System Where Historical Factors Are Thought to Prevail: Coral Reefs , 1996, The American Naturalist.
[52] M. McPeek. Linking Local Species Interactions to Rates of Speciation in Communities , 1996 .
[53] Wilhelm Barthlott,et al. Global distribution of species diversity in vascular plants : towards a world map of phytodiversity , 1996 .
[54] D. M. Newbery,et al. M. A. Huston, Biological Diversity: the coexistence of species on changing landscapes . Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-36930-4 (pbk). 681 + xix. pages. £24.95. , 1995, Journal of Tropical Ecology.
[55] Dawn M. Kaufman. Diversity of New World Mammals: Universality of the Latitudinal Gradients of Species and Bauplans , 1995 .
[56] A. Magurran,et al. Biological diversity : the coexistence of species on changing landscapes , 1994 .
[57] D. Jablonski. The tropics as a source of evolutionary novelty through geological time , 1993, Nature.
[58] D. Currie,et al. Global patterns of animal abundance and species energy use , 1993 .
[59] K. Rohde,et al. Rapoport's Rule Does Not Apply to Marine Teleosts and Cannot Explain Latitudinal Gradients in Species Richness , 1993, The American Naturalist.
[60] Eileen M. O'Brien. Climatic Gradients in Woody Plant Species Richness: Towards an Explanation Based on an Analysis of Southern Africa's Woody Flora , 1993 .
[61] Brian A. Maurer,et al. Energy supply and patterns of species richness on local and regional scales , 1993 .
[62] Dolph Schluter,et al. Continental comparisons of temperate-zone tree species diversity. , 1993 .
[63] K. Rohde. Latitudinal gradients in species diversity: the search for the primary cause , 1992 .
[64] M. Rosenzweig. Species Diversity Gradients: We Know More and Less Than We Thought , 1992 .
[65] Roy Haines-Young,et al. Biogeography , 1992, Vegetatio.
[66] D. Currie. Energy and Large-Scale Patterns of Animal- and Plant-Species Richness , 1991, The American Naturalist.
[67] K. Patalas. Diversity of the zooplankton communities in Canadian lakes as a function of climate , 1990 .
[68] F. Woodward,et al. Patterns in tree species richness as a test of the glacial extinction hypothesis , 1989, Nature.
[69] G. C. Stevens. The Latitudinal Gradient in Geographical Range: How so Many Species Coexist in the Tropics , 1989, The American Naturalist.
[70] Jack J. Lennon,et al. British bird species distributions and the energy theory , 1988, Nature.
[71] Terry L. Root,et al. ENERGY CONSTRAINTS ON AVIAN DISTRIBUTIONS AND ABUNDANCES , 1988 .
[72] F. Vuilleumier. An atlas of past and Present Pollen Maps for Europe: 0-13000 Years Ago , 1987 .
[73] David J. Currie,et al. Large-scale biogeographical patterns of species richness of trees , 1987, Nature.
[74] J. Turner,et al. Does Solar Energy Control Organic Diversity? Butterflies, Moths and the British Climate , 1987 .
[75] B. Huntley,et al. An Atlas of Past and Present Pollen Maps for Europe , 1984 .
[76] David H. Wright,et al. Species-energy theory: an extension of species-area theory , 1983 .
[77] R. Peters. The Ecological Implications of Body Size , 1983 .
[78] James H. Brown. Two Decades of Homage to Santa Rosalia: Toward a General Theory of Diversity , 1981 .
[79] M. B. Davis,et al. Quaternary history and the stability of forest communities , 1981 .
[80] Eric R. Pianka,et al. Geographical Trends in Numbers of Species , 1978, Science.
[81] H. Lieth. Modeling the Primary Productivity of the World , 1975 .
[82] A. Hecht,et al. Diversity and Age Relationships in Recent and Miocene Bivalves , 1972 .
[83] Francis G. Stehli,et al. Diversity and Age Patterns in Hermatypic Corals , 1971 .
[84] F. G. Stehli,et al. Generation and Maintenance of Gradients in Taxonomic Diversity , 1969, Science.
[85] M. Rosenzweig. Net Primary Productivity of Terrestrial Communities: Prediction from Climatological Data , 1968, The American Naturalist.
[86] F. W. Preston. The Canonical Distribution of Commonness and Rarity: Part I , 1962 .
[87] G. E. Hutchinson,et al. Homage to Santa Rosalia or Why Are There So Many Kinds of Animals? , 1959, The American Naturalist.
[88] F. W. Preston. The Commonness, And Rarity, of Species , 1948 .
[89] R. Fisher,et al. The Relation Between the Number of Species and the Number of Individuals in a Random Sample of an Animal Population , 1943 .