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-01557 | 2015 | Descombes,P., Pradervand, J.-N., Golay, J., Guisan, A. and Pellissier, L. 2015. Simulated shifts in trophic niche breadth modulate range loss of alpine butterflies under climate change. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01557 | |
| ECOG-01696 | 2015 | Algar, A. C. and López-Darias, M. 2015. Sex differences in how ecomorphological diversity responds to environmental variation in an island lizard. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01696 | |
| ECOG-01465 | 2015 | Stager, M., Pollock, H. S., Benham, P. M., Sly, N. D., Brawn, J. D. and Cheviron, Z. A. 2015. Disentangling environmental drivers of metabolic flexibility in birds: the importance of temperature extremes versus temperature variability. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01465 | |
| ECOG-01641 | 2015 | Terborgh, J., Davenport, L. C., Niangadouma, R., Dimoto, E., Mouandza, J. C., Scholtz, O. and Jaen, M. R. 2015. Megafaunal influences on tree recruitment in African equatorial forests. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.01641 | |
| ECOG-01640 | 2015 | Asner, G. P., Vaughn, N., Smit, I. P. J. and Levick, S. 2015. Ecosystem-scale effects of megafauna in African savannas. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01640 | |
| ECOG-01798 | 2015 | Michel, N. L., Smith, A. C., Clark, R. G., Morrissey, C. A. and Hobson, K. A. 2015. TPopulation trajectories of aerial insectivorous birds: differences in spatial synchrony and interspecific concordance reveal implications for guild-level conservation. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01798 | |
| ECOG-01589 | 2015 | Doughty, C., E., Wolf, A., Baraloto, C. and Malhi, Y. 2015. Interdependency of plants and animals in controlling the sodium balance of ecosystems and the impacts of global defaunation. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01589 | |
| ECOG-01779 | 2015 | Smith, F. A., Tomé, C. P., Elliott, E. A., Lyons, S. K., Newsome, S. D. and Stafford, T. W. 2015. Unraveling the consequences of the terminal Pleistocene megafauna extinction on mammal community assembly. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01779 | |
| 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-01930 | 2015 | Agnarsson, I., Gotelli, N. J., Agostini, D. and Kuntner, M. 2015. Limited role of character displacement in the coexistence of congeneric Anelosimus spiders in a Madagascan montane forest. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01930 | |
| ECOG-01593 | 2015 | Doughty, C. E., Faurby, S. and Svenning, J.-C. 2015. The impact of the megafauna extinctions on savanna woody cover in South America. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01593 | |
| ECOG-01643 | 2015 | Terborgh, J., Davenport, L. C., Niangadouma, R., Dimoto, E., Mouandza, J. C., Schultz, O. and Jaen, M. R. 2015. The African rainforest: odd man out or megafaunal landscape? African and Amazonian forests compared. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01643 | |
| ECOG-01753 | 2015 | Lewis, R. J., Marrs, R. H., Paceman, R. J., Milligan, G. and Lennon, J. J. 2015. Climate drives temporal replacement and nested-resultant richness patterns of Scottish coastal vegetation. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.01753 | |
| ECOG-01685 | 2015 | Horváth, Z., Vad, C. F. and Ptacnik R. 2015. Wind dispersal results in a gradient of dispersal limitation and environmental match among discrete aquatic habitats. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01685 | |
| ECOG-01814 | 2015 | Tsirogiannis, C. and Sandel, B. 2015. PhyloMeasures: a package for computing phylogenetic biodiversity measures and their statistical moments. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01814 | |
| ECOG-01789 | 2015 | Bässler, C., Cadotte, M. W., Beudert, B., Heibl, C., Blaschke, M., Bradtka, J. H., Langbehn, T., Werth, S. and Müller, J. 2015. Contrasting patterns of lichen functional diversity and species richness across an elevation gradient. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.01789 | |
| ECOG-01566 | 2015 | Bartlett, L. J., Williams, D. R., Prescott, G. W., Balmford, A., Green, R. E., Eriksson, A., Valdes, P. J., Singarayer, J. S. and Manica, A. 2015. Robustness despite uncertainty: regional climate data reveal the dominant role of humans in explaining global extinctions of Late Quaternary megafauna. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.01566 | |
| ECOG-01621 | 2015 | Schmid, B., Nottebrock, H., Esler, K. J., Pagel, J., Pauw, A., Böhning-Gaese, K., Schurr, F. M. and Schleuning, M. 2015. Responses of nectar-feeding birds to floral resources at multiple spatial scales. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01621 | |
| ECOG-01511 | 2015 | Efford, M. G., Dawson, D. K., Jhala, Y. V. and Qureshi, Q. 2015. Density-dependent home-range size revealed by spatially explicit capture–recapture. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01511 | |
| ECOG-01667 | 2015 | Comte, J., Monier, A., Crevecoeur, S., Lovejoy, C. and Vincent, W. F. 2015. Microbial biogeography of permafrost thaw ponds across the changing northern landscape. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01667 | |
