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 |
---|---|---|---|
E5336 | 2008 | Brinkerhoff, R. J., Ray, C., Thiagarajan, B., Collinge, S. K., Cully, J. F. Jr, Holmes, B. and Gage, K. L. 2008. Prairie dog presence affects occurrence patterns of disease vectors on small mammals. – Ecography 31: 655–663. | e5336.pdf |
ECOG-03419 | 2017 | Bried, J. T. and Siepielski, A. M. 2017. Opportunistic data reveal widespread species turnover in Enallagma damselflies at biogeographical scales. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03419 | ecog-03419.pdf |
ECOG-03917 | 2018 | Brehm, G., Zeuss, D. and Colwell, R. K. 2018. Moth body size increases with elevation along a complete tropical elevational gradient for two hyperdiverse clades. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03917 | ecog-03917.pdf |
ECOG-00030 | 2013 | Brehm, G., Strutzenberger, P. and Fiedler, K. 2013. Phylogenetic diversity of geometrid moths decreases with elevation in the tropical Andes. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx. | ecog-00030_appendices.zip ecog-00030.pdf |
ECOG-04898 | 2020 | Braz, A. G., de Moraes Weber, M., de Souza Lima Figueiredo, M. and de Viveiros Grelle, C. E. 2020. Interspecific competition constrains local abundance in highly suitable areas. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04898 | ecog-04898.zip |
ECOG-00138 | 2013 | Braunisch, V., Coppes, J., Schmid, H., Suchant, R., Arlettaz, R. and Bollmann, K. 2013. Selecting from correlated climate variables: a major source of uncertainty for predicting species distributions under climate change. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx. | ecog-00138.pdf |
E5891 | 2010 | Braunisch, V. and Suchant, R. 2010. Predicting species distributions based on incomplete survey data: the trade-off between precision and scale. – Ecography 33: 826-840. | e5891.pdf |
ECOG-01102 | 2015 | Braun, D. C., Moore, J. W., Candy, J. and Bailey, R. E. 2015. Population diversity in salmon: linkages among response, genetic and life history diversity. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01102 | ecog-01102.pdf |
ECOG-03618 | 2018 | Bracis, C., Bildstein, K. L. and Mueller, T. 2018. Revisitation analysis uncovers spatio-temporal patterns in animal movement data. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.03618 | ecog-03618.zip |
ECOG-00982 | 2014 | Boyero, L., Pearson, R. G., Swan, C. M., Hui, C., Albariño, R. J., Arunachalam, M., Callisto, M., Chará, J., Chará-Serna, A. M., Chauvet, E., Cornejo, A., Dudgeon, D., Encalada, A., Ferreira, V., Gessner, M. O., Gonçalves Jr, J. F., Graça, M. A. S., Helson, J. E., Mathooko, J. M., McKie, B. G., Moretti, M. S. and Yule, C. M. 2015. Latitudinal gradient of nestedness and its potential drivers in stream detritivores. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00982 | ecog-00982.pdf |
E6315 | 2010 | Boyer, A. G. and Jetz, W. 2010. Biogeography of body size in Pacific island birds. – Ecography 33: 369–379. | e6315.pdf |
ECOG-04690 | 2019 | Bower, L. M. and Winemiller, K. O. 2019. Fish assemblage convergence along stream environmental gradients: an intercontinental analysis. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04690 | ecog-04690.zip |
ECOG-03504 | 2018 | Bovendorp, R. S., Brum, F. T., McCleery, R. A., Baiser, B., Loyola, R., Cianciaruso, M. V. and Galetti, M. 2018. Defaunation and fragmentation erode small mammal diversity dimensions in tropical forests. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03504 | ecog-03504.pdf |
ECOG-05024 | 2020 | Boulanger, E., Dalongeville, A., Andrello, M., Mouillot, D. and Manel, S. 2020. Spatial graphs highlight how multi-generational dispersal shapes landscape genetic patterns. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.05024 | ecog-05024.pdf |
ECOG-00694 | 2014 | Boulangeat, I., Georges, D., Dentant, C., Bonet, R., Van Es, J., Abdulhak, S., Zimmermann, N. E. and Thuiller, W. 2014. Anticipating the spatio-temporal response of plant diversity and vegetation structure to climate and land use change in a protected area. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00694 | ecog-00694.pdf |
ECOG-02009 | 2017 | Botta-Dukát, Z. 2017. The generalized replication principle and the partitioning of functional diversity into independent alpha and beta components. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02009 | ecog-02009.pdf |
ECOG-04396 | 2019 | Bosc, C., Hui, C., Roets, F. and Pauw, A. 2019. Importance of biotic niches versus drift in a plant-inhabiting arthropod community depends on rarity and trophic group. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04396 | ecog-04396.pdf |
ECOG-00366 | 2014 | Borthagaray, A. I., Barreneche, J. M., Abades, S. and Arim, M. 2014. Modularity along organism dispersal gradients challenges a prevailing view of abrupt transitions in animal landscape perception. – Ecography 37: xxx–xxx. | ecog-00366.pdf ecog-00366_appendix.zip |
E7128 | 2011 | Borda-de-Água, L., Borges, P. A. V., Hubbell, S. P. and Pereira, H. M. 2011. Spatial scaling of species abundance distributions. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e7128.pdf |
E6088 | 2010 | Bonifait, S. and Villard, M.-A. 2010. Efficiency of buffer zones around ponds to conserve odonates and songbirds in mined peat bogs. – Ecography 33: 913-920. | e6088.pdf |