Appendix
Appendices are any supplementary material that may be associated with a particular article. Most often they are uploaded as pdf:s, but may also consist of excel files, scripts, videos etc. Appendices are searchable via manuscript number, doi or author name.
Supplementary material must follow the guidelines given here:
Article number | Year | Description | Documents |
---|---|---|---|
E5503 | 2008 | Spribille, T., Thor, G., Bunnell, F. L., Goward, T. and Björk, C. R. 2008. Lichens on dead wood: species-substrate relationships in the epiphytic lichen floras of the Pacific Northwest and Fennoscandia. – Ecography 31: 741–750. | e5503.pdf |
ECOG-04611 | 2019 | Srinivasan, U., Elsen, P. R. and Wilcove, D. S. 2019. Annual temperature variation influences the vulnerability of montane bird communities to land-use change. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04611 | ecog-04611.pdf |
ECOG-01465 | 2015 | Stager, M., Pollock, H. S., Benham, P. M., Sly, N. D., Brawn, J. D. and Cheviron, Z. A. 2015. Disentangling environmental drivers of metabolic flexibility in birds: the importance of temperature extremes versus temperature variability. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01465 | ecog-01465.zip |
E6940 | 2011 | Stange, E., Ayres, M. P. and Bess, J. A. 2011. Concordant population dynamics of Lepidoptera herbivores in a forest ecosystem. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6940.pdf |
ECOG-02745 | 2016 | Staveley, T. A. B., Perry, D., Lindborg, R. and Gullström, M. 2016. Seascape structure and complexity influence temperate seagrass fish assemblage composition. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02745 | ecog-02745.pdf |
E6264 | 2010 | Stefanescu, C., Carnicer, J. and Peñuelas, J. 2010. Determinants of species richness in generalist and specialist Mediterranean butterflies: the negative synergistic forces of climate and habitat change. – Ecography 33: xxx–xxx. | e6264.pdf |
E7738 | 2012 | Stefanescu, C., Páramo, F., Åkesson, S., Alarcón, M., Ávila, A., Brereton, T., Carnicer, J., Cassar, L. F., Fox, R., Heliölä, J., Hill, J. K., Hirneisen, N., Kjellén, N., Kühn, E., Kuussaari, M., Leskinen, M., Liechti, F., Musche, M., Regan, E. C., Reynolds, D. R., Ryrholm, N., Schmaljohann, H., Settele, J., Thomas, C. D., van Swaay, C. and Chapman, J. W. 2012. Multi-generational long-distance migration of insects: studying the painted lady butterfly in the Western Palaearctic. – Ecography 35: xxx–xxx. | e7738.pdf |
ECOG-04445 | 2019 | Stegner, M. A., Turner, M. G., Iglesias, V. and Whitlock, C. 2019. Post-fire vegetation and climate dynamics in low-elevation forests over the last three millennia in Yellowstone National Park. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04445 | ecog-04445.pdf |
ECOG-00362 | 2013 | Stenberg, D. and Kennard, M. J. 2013. Phylogenetic effects on functional traits and life history strategies of Australian freshwater fish. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx. | ecog-00362.pdf ecog-00362.zip |
ECOG-02233 | 2016 | Stephens, R. B., Hocking, D. J., Yamasaki, M. and Rowe, R. J. 2016. Synchrony in small mammalcommunity dynamics across a forested landscape. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02233 | ecog-02233.pdf |
ECOG-02755 | 2017 | Stern, N., Douek, J., Goren, M. and Rinkevich, B. 2017. With no gap to mind: a shallow genealogy within the world’s most widespread small pelagic fish. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02755 | ecog-02755.pdf |
ECOG-03556 | 2018 | Stetz, J. B., Mitchell, M. S. and Kendall, K. C. 2018. Using spatially-explicit capture–recapture models to explain variation in seasonal density patterns of sympatric ursids. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.03556 | ecog-03556.pdf |
ECOG-00847 | 2014 | Stevens, R. D. and and Maria M. Gavilanez, M. M. 2015.Dimensionality of community structure: phylogenetic, morphological and functional perspectives along biodiversity and environmental gradients. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00847. | ecog-00847.zip |
ECOG-03564 | 2018 | Stevens, R. D. and Tello, J. S. 2018. A latitudinal gradient in dimensionality of biodiversity. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03654 | ecog-03654.pdf |
ECOG-00719 | 2014 | Stigall, A. L. 2014. When and how do species achieve niche stability over long time scales? – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00719 | ecog-00719.pdf |
ECOG-03984 | 2018 | Stoessel, M., Elmhagen, B., Vinka, M., Hellström, P. and Angerbjörn, A. 2019. The fluctuating world of a tundra predator guild: bottom-up constraints overrule top-down species interactions in winter. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03984 | ecog-03984.pdf |
ECOG-02393 | 2016 | Stralberg, D., Matsuoka, S. M., Handel, C. M., Bayne, E. M., Schmiegelow, F. K. A. and Hamann, A. 2016. Biogeography of boreal passerine range dynamics in western North America: past, present, and future. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02393 | ecog-02393.pdf |
ECOG-03330 | 2018 | Strangas, M. L., Navas, C. A., Rodrigues, M. T. and Carnaval, A. C. 2018. Thermophysiology, microclimates, and species distributions of lizards in the mountains of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03330 | ecog-03330.pdf |
ECOG-03447 | 2017 | Strona, G., Matthews, T. J., Kortsch, S. and Veech, J. A. 2017. NOS: a software suite to compute node overlap and segregation ( ) in ecological networks. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03447 | ecog-03447.pdf |
ECOG-05026 | 2020 | Stropp, J., Umbelino, B., Correia, R. A., Campos-Silva, J. V., Ladle, R. J. and Malhado, A. C. M. 2020. The ghosts of forests past and future: deforestation and botanical sampling in the Brazilian Amazon. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.05026 | ecog-05026.pdf |