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 |
---|---|---|---|
ECOG-00935 | 2014 | Rubio, L., Bodin, Ö., Brotons, L. and Saura, S. 2014. Connectivity conservation priorities for individual patches evaluated in the present landscape: how durable and effective are they in the long term? – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00935 | ecog-00935.pdf |
ECOG-01703 | 2015 | Royan, A., Reynolds, S. J., Hannah, D. M., Prudhomme, C., Noble, D. G. and Sadler, J. P. 2015. Shared environmental responses drive co-occurrence patterns in river bird communities. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01703 | ecog-01703.pdf |
ECOG-01534 | 2015 | Roy, C., McIntire, E. J. B. and Cumming, S. G. 2015. Assessing the spatial variability of density dependence in waterfowl populations. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01534 | ecog-01534.zip |
E5538 | 2009 | Rowe, R. J. 2009. Environmental and geometric drivers of small mammal diversity along elevational gradients in Utah. – Ecography 32: 411–422. | e5538.pdf |
ECOG-04773 | 2019 | Rovero, F., Ahumada, J., Jansen, P. A., Sheil, D., Alvarez, P., Boekee, K., Espinosa, S., Lima, M. G. G., Martin, E. H., O’Brien, T. G., Salvador, J., Santos, F., Rosa, M., Zvoleff, A., Sutherland, C. and Tenan, S. 2019. A standardized assessment of forest mammal communities reveals consistent functional composition and vulnerability across the tropics. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04773 | ecog-04773.pdf |
ECOG-00566 | 2014 | Rousset, F. and Ferdy, J.-B. 2014. Testing environmental and genetic effects in the presence of spatial autocorrelation. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0587.2013.00566.x | ecog-00566.pdf ecog-00566_appendixa_g.zip |
ECOG-04871 | 2020 | Rotenberry, J. T. and Balasubramaniam, P. 2020. Connecting species’ geographical distributions to environmental variables: range maps versus observed points of occurrence. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04871 | ecog-04871.pdf |
E6433 | 2010 | Rota, C. T., Fletcher, R. J. Jr, Evans, J. M. and Hutto, R. L. 2010. Does accounting for imperfect detection improve species distribution models? – Ecography 33: xxx–xxx. | e6433.pdf |
ECOG-00218 | 2014 | Roslin, T., Várkonyi, G., Koponen, M., Vikberg, V. and Nieminen, M. 2014. Species–area relationships across four trophic levels – decreasing island size truncates food chains. – Ecography 37: xxx–xxx. | ecog-00218.pdf |
ECOG-02652 | 2016 | Rosenblad, K. C. and Sax, D. F. 2016. A new framework for investigating biotic homogenization and exploring future trajectories: oceanic island plant and bird assemblages as a case study. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02652 | ecog-02652.zip |
ECOG-00466 | 2013 | Rosauer, D. F., Ferrier, S., Williams, K. J., Manion, G., Keogh, J. S. and Laffan, S. W. 2013. Phylogenetic generalised dissimilarity modelling: a new approach to analysing and predicting spatial turnover in the phylogenetic composition of communities. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx. | ecog-00466.pdf |
E7773 | 2012 | Roquet, C., Thuiller, W. and Lavergne, S. 2012. Building megaphylogenies for macroecology: taking up the challenge. – Ecography 35: xxx–xxx. | e7773.pdf |
ECOG-01182 | 2014 | Ropert-Coudert, Y., Kato, A., Meyer, X., Pellé, M., Macintosh, A. J. J., Angelier, F., Chastel, O., Widmann, M., Arthur, B., Raymond, B. and Raclot, T. 2014. A complete breeding failure in an Adélie penguin colony correlates with unusual and extreme environmental events. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01182 | ecog-01182.pdf |
ECO-01236 | 2014 | Ronk, A., Szava-Kovats, R. and Pärtel, M. 2015. Applying the dark diversity concept to plants at the European scale. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01236 | ecog-01236.pdf |
ECOG-00706 | 2014 | Romo, H., García-Barros, E., Márquez, A. L., Moreno, J. C. and Real, R. 2014. Effects of climate change on the distribution of ecologically interacting species: butterflies and their main food plants in Spain. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00706 | ecog-00706.pdf |
ECOG-05053 | 2020 | Romero-Muñoz, A., Benítez-López, A., Zurell, D., Baumann, M., Camino, M., Decarre, J., del Castillo, H., Giordano, A. J., Gómez-Valencia, B., Levers, C., Noss, A. J., Quiroga, V., Thompson, J., Torres, R., Velilla, M., Weiler, A. and Kuemmerle, T. 2020. Increasing synergistic effects of habitat destruction and hunting on mammals over three decades in the Gran Chaco. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.05053 | ecog-05053.pdf |
ECOG-01477 | 2015 | Romero, D., Olivero, J., Brito, J. C. and Real, R. 2015. Comparison of approaches to combine species distribution models based on different sets of predictors. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01477 | ecog-01477.pdf |
E4954 | 2007 | Romdal, T. S. and Grytnes, J.-A. 2007. An indirect area effect on elevational species richness patterns. – Ecography 30: 440–448. | e4954.pdf |
E4181 | 2006 | Romanuk, T. N., Jackson, L. J., Post, J. R., McCauley, E. and Martinez, N. D. 2006. The structure of food webs along river networks. – Ecography 29: 3–10. | e4181.pdf |
ECOG-03457 | 2017 | Rolshausen, G., Dal Grande, F., Sadowska-Deś, A. D.,Otte, J. and Schmitt, I. 2017. Quantifying the climatic niche of symbiont partners in a lichen symbiosis indicates mutualist-mediated niche expansions. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03457 | ecog-03457.zip |