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 Yearsort descending Description Documents
E7078 2011

Bunnefeld, N. and Phillimore, A. B. 2011. Island, archipelago and taxon effects: mixed models as a means of dealing with the imperfect design of nature’s experiments. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e7078.pdf
E7084 2011

Papadatou, E., Pradel, R., Schaub, M., Dolch, D., Geiger, H., Ibañez, C., Kerth, G., Popa-Lisseanu, A., Schorcht, W., Teubner, J. and Gimenez, O. 2011. Comparing survival among species with imperfect detection using multilevel analysis of mark–recapture data: a case study on bats. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e7084.pdf
E7085 2011

Pollock, L. J., Morris, W. K. and Vesk, P. A. 2011. The role of functional traits in species distributions revealed through a hierarchical model. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e7085.pdf
E7103 2011

Godsoe, W. and Harmon. L. J. 2010. How do species interactions affect species distribution models? – Ecography 000: 000–000

e7103.pdf
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
E7132 2011

Wu, Y., Yang, Q., Wen, Z., Xia, L., Zhang, Q. and Zhou, H. 2011. What drive the species richness patterns of non-volant small mammals along a subtropical elevational gradient? – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e7132.pdf
E7136 2011

Bogich, T. L., Barker, G. M., Mahlfeld, K., Climo, F., Green, R. and Balmford, A. 2011. Fragmentation, grazing and the species–area relationship. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e7136.pdf
E7147 2011

Roberts, D. R. and Hamann, A. 2011. Method selection for species distribution modelling: are temporally or spatially independent evaluations
necessary? – Ecography 34: 000–000.

e7147.pdf
E6141 2011

Berglund, H., Hottola, J., Penttilä, R. and Siitonen, J. 2011. Linking substrate and habitat requirements of wood-inhabiting fungi to their regional extinction vulnerability. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6141.pdf
E6483 2011

Ficetola, G. F., Manenti, R., De Bernardi, F. and Padoa-Schioppa, E. 2011. Can patterns of spatial autocorrelation reveal population processes? An analysis with the fire salamander. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6483.pdf
E6370 2011

Rhodes, J. R. and Jonzén, N. 2011. Monitoring temporal trends in spatially structured populations: how should sampling effort be allocated between space and time? – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6370.pdf
e6370_getsurveyo.m
e6370_getsurveyv.m
E6456 2011

Bellier, E., Monestiez, P., Certain, G., Chadoeuf, J. and Bretagnolle, V. 2011. Decomposing the heterogeneity of species distributions into multiple scales: a hierarchical framwork for large-scale count surveys. – Ecography
34: xxx–xxx.

e6456.pdf
E6545 2011

Bean, W. T., Stafford, R. and Brashares, J. S. 2011. The effects of small sample size and sample bias on threshold selection and accuracy assessment of species distribution models. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6545.pdf
E6458 2011

Vandewoestijne, S. and Van Dyck, H. 2011. Flight morphology along a latitudinal gradient in a butterfly: do geographic clines differ between agricultural and woodland landscapes? – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6458.pdf
E6584 2011

Schaub, M., Kéry, M., Birrer, S., Rudin, M. and Jenni, L. 2011. Habitat-density associations are not geographically transferable in Swiss farmland birds. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6584.pdf
E6614 2011

Jacobs, B. F. 2011. Spatial patterns and ecological drivers of historic piñon-juniper woodland expansion in the American southwest. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6614.pdf
e6614_appendix1.xls
e6614_appendix2.xls
E6651 2011

Yen, J. D. L., Thomson, J. R., Vesk, P. A. and Mac Nally, R. 2011. To what are woodland birds responding? Inference on relative importance of in-site habitat variables using multiple ensemble habitat-modelling techniques. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6651.pdf
E6653 2011

Fitzpatrick, M. C., Sanders, N. J., Ferrier, S., Longino, J. T. Weiser, M. D. and Dunn, R. 2011. Forecasting the future of biodiversity: a test of single- and multi-species models for ants in North America. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6653.pdf
ant.db_.09.08.2010.csv
E6664 2011

Darmon, G., Calenge, C., Loison, A., Jullien, J.-M., Maillard, D. and Lopez, J.-F. 2011. Spatial distribution and habitat selection in coexisting species of mountain ungulates. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6664.pdf
E6712 2011

Schippers, P., Verboom, J., Vos, C. C. and Jochem, R. 2011. Metapopulation shift and survival of woodland birds under climate change: will species be able to track? – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

e6712.pdf

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