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 |
---|---|---|---|
E6850 | 2011 | Fontaneto, D., Barbosa, A. M., Segers, H. and Pautasso, M. 2011. The ‘rotiferologist’ effect and the other global drivers of species richness in rotifers. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6850.pdf e6850_appendix1.csv e6850_appendix2.csv |
E6854 | 2010 | Morin, X. and Lechowicz, M. J. 2010. Geographical and ecological patterns of range size in North American trees. – Ecography 33: xxx–xxx. | e6854.pdf |
E6856 | 2011 | Hoverman, J. T., Davis, C. J., Werner, E. E., Skelly, D. K., Relyea, R. A. and Yurewicz, K. L. 2011. Environmental gradients and the structure of freshwater snail communities. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6856.pdf |
E6860 | 2011 | Dauby, G. and Hardy, O. J. 2011. Sampled-based estimation of diversity sensu stricto by transforming Hurlbert diversities into effective number of species. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6860.pdf |
E6866 | 2011 | Gifford, M. E. and Kozak, K. H. 2011. Islands in the sky or squeezed at the top? Ecological causes of elevation range limits in montane salamanders. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6866.pdf |
E6869 | 2011 | Qiao, X., Tang, Z., Shen, Z. and Fang, J. 2011. What causes geographical variation in the species–area relationships? A test from forests in China. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6869.pdf |
E6871 | 2011 | Bateman, B. L., VanDerWal, J. and Johnson, C. 2011. Nice weather for bettongs: using weather events, not climate means, in species distribution models. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6871.pdf e6871_video_a2.gif e6871_video_a3.gif |
e6874 | 2011 | Mora, C., Treml, E. A., Roberts, J., Crosby, K., Roy, D. and Tittensor, D. P. 2011. High connectivity among habitats precludes the relationship between dispersal and range size in tropical reef fishes. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6874.pdf e6874_supplementarydatabase.xls e6874_dispersalsimulation.gif |
e6878 | 2011 | Brotons, L., De Cáceres, M., Fall, A. and Fortin, M.-J. 2011. Modeling bird species distribution change in fire prone Mediterranean landscapes: incorporating species dispersal and landscape dynamics. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6878.pdf |
E6882 | 2012 | Tang, Z., Fang, J., Chi, X., Feng, J., Liu, Y., Shen, Z., Wang, X., Wang, Z., Wu, X., Zheng, C. and Gaston, K. J. 2012. Patterns of plant beta-diversity along elevational and latitudinal gradients in mountain forests of China. – Ecography 35: xxx–xxx. | e6882.pdf |
e6900 | 2011 | Jamoneau, A., Chabrerie, O., Closset-Kopp, D. and Decocq, G. 2011. Fragmentation alters beta-diversity patterns of habitat specialists within forest metacommunities. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6900.pdf |
e6904 | 2011 | Lepš, J., de Bello, F., Šmilauer, P. and Doležal, J. 2011. Community trait response to environment: disentangling species turnover vs intraspecific trait variability effects. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6904.pdf e6904_trait-flex-v3.r |
e6919 | 2011 | Araújo, M. B., Rozenfeld, A., Rahbek, C. and Marquet, P. A. 2011. Using species co-occurrence networks to assess the impact of climate change. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6919.pdf |
e6923 | 2010 | Manzaneda, A. J. and Rey, P. J. 2011. Geographical and interspecific variation in the nutrient-enrichment hypothesis as an adaptive advantage of myrmecochory. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6923.pdf |
e6924 | 2011 | Buchmann, C. M., Schurr, F. M., Nathan, R. and Jeltsch, F. 2011. Movement upscaled – the importance of individual foraging movement for community response to habitat loss. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6924.pdf |
E6928 | 2011 | Schlaepfer, D. R., Lauenroth, W. K. and Bradford, J. B. 2011. Effects of ecohydrological variables on current and future ranges, local suitability patterns, and model accuracy in big sagebrush. – Ecography 000: 000–000. | e6928.pdf |
E6930 | 2011 | Rodríguez-Pérez, J., Wiegand, T. and Santamaria,L. 2011. Frugivore behavior determines plant distribution: a spatially-explicit analysis of a plant-disperserinteraction. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6930.pdf |
E6936 | 2011 | Frey, S. J. K., Strong, A. M. and McFarland, K. P. 2011. The relative contribution of local habitat and landscape context to metapopulation processes: a dynamic occupancy modeling approach. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6936.pdf |
E6938 | 2011 | Garnas, J. R., Houston, D. R., Ayres, M. P. and Evans, C. 2011. Disease ontogeny overshadows effects of climate and species interactions on population dynamics in a nonnative forest disease complex. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx. | e6938.pdf |
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 |