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 |
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ECOG-03067 | 2017 | Liu, C., Dudley, K. L., Xu, Z.-H. and Economo, E. P. 2017. Mountain metacommunities: climate and spatial connectivity shape ant diversity in a complex landscape. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03067 | ![]() |
ECOG-00836 | 2017 | Thuiller, W., Münkemüller, T., Schiffers, K. H., Georges, D., Dullinger, S., Eckhart, V. M., Edwards, Jr, T. C., Gravel, D., Kunstler, G., Merow, C., Moore, K., Piedallu, C., Vissault, S., Zimmermann, N. E., Zurell, D. and Schurr, F. M. 2014. Does probability of occurrence relate to population dynamics? – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00836 | ![]() |
ECOG-03885 | 2017 | Heuschele, J., Ekvall, M. T., Mariani, P. and Lindemann, C. 2017. On the missing link in ecology: improving communication between modellers and experimentalists. – Oikos doi: 10.1111/oik.03885 | ![]() |
ECOG-03058 | 2017 | Fecchio, A., Pinheiro, R., Felix, G., Faria, I. P., Pinho, J. B., Lacorte, G. A., Braga, E. M., Farias, I. P., Aleixo, A., Tkach, V. V., Collins, M. D., Bell, J. A. and Weckstein, J. D. 2017. Host community similarity and geography shape the diversity and distribution of haemosporidian parasites in Amazonian birds. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03058 | ![]() |
ECOG-03031 | 2017 | Fordham, D. A., Saltré, F., Haythorne, S., Wigley, T. M. L., Otto-Bliesner, B. L., Chan, K. C. and Brooks, B. W. 2017. PaleoView: a tool for generating continuous climate projections spanning the last 21 000 years at regional and global scales. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.03031 | ![]() |
ECOG-02513 | 2017 | Cramer, K. L., O’Dea, A., Carpenter, C. and Norris, R. D. 2017. A 3000 year record of Caribbean reef urchin communities reveals causes and consequences of longterm decline in Diadema antillarum. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02513 | ![]() |
ECOG-03049 | 2017 | Phillips, S. J., Anderson, R. P., Dudík, M., Schapire, R. E. and Blair, M. E. 2017. Opening the black box: an open-source release of Maxent. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03049 | ![]() |
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-02986 | 2017 | Sommer, B., Beger, M., Harrison, P. L., Babcock, R. C. and Pandolfi, J. M. 2017. Differential response to abiotic stress controls species distributions at biogeographic transition zones. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02986 | ![]() |
ECOG-02845 | 2017 | Leitão, R. P. Zuanon, J., Mouillot, D., Leal, C. G., Hughes, R. M., Kaufmann, P. R., Villéger, S., Pompeu, P. S., Kasper, D., de Paula, F. R., Ferraz, S. F. B. and Gardner, T. A. 2017. Disentangling the pathways of land use impacts on the functional structure of fish assemblages in Amazon streams. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02845 | ![]() |
ECOG-03074 | 2017 | Williams, P. H., Lobo, J. M. and Meseguer, A. S. 2017. Bumblebees take the high road: climatically integrative biogeography shows that escape from Tibet, not Tibetan uplift, is associated with divergences of presentday Mendacibombus. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.03074 | ![]() |
ECOG-02590 | 2017 | Krüger, L., Ramos, J. A., Xavier, J. C., Grémillet, D., González-Solís, J., Petry, M. V., Phillips, R. A., Wanless, R. M. and Paiva, V. H. 2017. Projected distributions of Southern Ocean albatrosses, petrels and fisheries as a consequence of climatic change. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02590 | ![]() |
ECOG-02683 | 2017 | Eme, D., Zagmajster, M., Delić, T., Fišer, C., Flot, J.- F., Konecny-Dupré, L., Pálsson, S., Stoch, F., Zakšek, V., Douady, C. and Malard, F. 2017. Do cryptic species matter in macroecology? Sequencing European groundwater crustaceans yields smaller ranges but does not challenge biodiversity determinants. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02683 | ![]() |
ECOG-02637 | 2017 | Chain-Guadarrama, A., Imbach, P., Vilchez-Mendoza, S., Vierling, L. A. and Finegan, B. 2017. Potential trajectories of old-growth Neotropical forest functional composition under climate change. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02637 | ![]() |
ECOG-02847 | 2017 | Magrach, A., Holzschuh, A., Bartomeus, I., Riedinger, V., Roberts, S. P. M., Rundlöf, M., Vujić, A., Wickens, J. B., Wickens, V. J., Bommarco, R., González-Varo, J. P., Potts, S. G., Smith, H. G., Steffan-Dewenter, I. and Vilà, M. 2017. Plant-pollinator networks in semi-natural grasslands are resistant to the loss of pollinators during blooming of mass-flowering crops. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02847 | ![]() |
ECOG-02926 | 2017 | Gianuca, A. T., Engelen, J., Brans, K. I., Hanashiro, F. T. T., Vanhamel, M., van den Berg, E. M., Souffreau, C. and De Meester, L. 2017. Taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic metacommunity ecology of cladoceran zooplankton along urbanization gradients. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02926 | ![]() |
ECOG-02946 | 2017 | Giam, X. and Olden, J. D. 2017. Drivers and interrelationships among multiple dimensions of rarity for freshwater fishes. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.02946 | ![]() |
ECOG-02314 | 2017 | Weiser, M. D., Michaletz, S., Buzzard, V., Deng, Y., He, Z., Shen, L., Enquist, B. J., Waide, R. B., Zhou, J. and Kaspari, M. 2017. Toward a theory for diversity gradients: the abundance-adaptation hypothesis. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02314 | ![]() |
ECOG-02738 | 2017 | Baiser, B., Valle, D., Zelazny, Z. and Burleigh, J. G. 2017. Non-random patterns of invasion and extinction reduce phylogenetic diversity in island bird assemblages. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02738 | ![]() |
ECOG-02908 | 2017 | Luo, Y. and Li, S. 2017. Cave Stedocys spitting spiders illuminate the history of the Himalayas and southeast Asia. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02908 | ![]() |