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 |
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ECOG-02314 | 2017 | Weiser, M. D., Michaletz, S., Buzzard, V., Deng, Y., He, Z., Shen, L., Enquist, B. J., Waide, R. B., Zhou, J. and Kaspari, M. 2017. Toward a theory for diversity gradients: the abundance-adaptation hypothesis. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02314 | ecog-02314.pdf |
ECOG-01450 | 2015 | Welch, H., Pressey, R. L., Heron, S. F., Ceccarelli, D. M. and Hobday, A. J. 2015. TRegimes of chlorophyll-a in the Coral Sea and implications for evaluating adequacy of marine protected areas. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.01450 | ecog-01450.pdf |
ECOG-03886 | 2018 | Wells, K., Gibson, D. I. and Clark, N. J. 2019. Global patterns in helminth host specificity: phylogenetic and functional diversity of regional host species pools matter. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03886 | ecog-03886.pdf |
E6123 | 2010 | Welsh Jr, H. H. and Hodgson, G. R. 2010. Spatial relationships in a dendritic network: the herpetofaunal metacommunity of the Mattole River catchment of northwest California. – Ecography 33: xxx–xxx. | e6123.pdf |
ECOG-03558 | 2018 | Wen, Z., Wu, Y., Cheng, J., Cai, T., Du, Y., Ge, D., Xia, L. and Yang, Q. 2018. Abundance of small mammals correlates with their elevational range sizes and elevational distributions in the subtropics. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.03558 | ecog-03558.pdf |
ECOG-00242 | 2013 | Werner, P., Lötters, S., Schmidt, B. R., Engler, J. O. and Rödder, D. 2013. The role of climate for the range limits of parapatric European land salamanders. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx. | ecog-00242.pdf |
ECOG-02318 | 2016 | Westgate, M. J., Tulloch, A. I. T., Barton, P. S., Pierson, J. C. and Lindenmayer, D. B. 2016. Optimal taxonomic groups for biodiversity assessment: a meta-analytic approach. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02318 | ecog-02318.pdf |
ECOG-00521 | 2014 | While, G. M. and Uller, T. 2014. Quo vadis amphibia? Global warming and breeding phenology in frogs, toads and salamanders. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.00521 | ecog-00521.pdf suppinfo_ecography.xlsx |
ECOG-03111 | 2017 | White, H. J., Montgomery, W. I., Pakeman, R. J. and Lennon, J. J. 2017. Spatiotemporal scaling of plant species richness and functional diversity in a temperate semi-natural grassland. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.03111 | ecog-03111.pdf |
E4685 | 2006 | White, P. and Kerr, J. 2006. Contrasting spatial and temporal global change impacts on butterfly species richness during the 20th century. – Ecography 29: 908–918. | e4685.pdf |
ECOG-00526 | 2014 | White, R. S. A., McHugh, P. A., Glover, C. N. and Mcintosh, A. R. 2014. Multiple environmental stressors increase the realised niche breadth of a forest-dwelling fish. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.00526 | ecog-00526.pdf |
E7181 | 2011 | Whitfeld, T. J. S., Kress, W. J., Erickson, D. L. and Weiblen, G. D. 2011. Change in community phylogenetic structure during tropical forest succession: | e7181.pdf |
E5564 | 2008 | Wichmann, M. C., Alexander, M. J., Hails, R. S. and Bullock, J. M. 2008. Historical distribution and regional dynamics of two Brassica species. – Ecography 31: 673–684. | e5564.pdf |
ECOG-02718 | 2017 | Wiederholt, R., Mattsson, B. J., Thogmartin, W., Runge, M. C., Diffendorfer, J. E., Erickson, R. A., Federico, P., López-Hoffman, L., Fryxell, J., Norris, D. R. and Sample, C. 2017. Estimating the per-capita contribution of habitats and pathways in a migratory network: a modelling approach. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.02718 | ecog-02718.zip |
E7361 | 2012 | Wiegand, T., Fangliang, H. and Hubbell, S. P. 2012. A systematic comparison of summary characteristics for quantifying point patterns in ecology. – Ecography 35: xxx–xxx. | e7361.pdf |
ECOG-00498 | 2014 | Więski, K. and Pennings, S. 2014. Latitudinal variation in resistance and tolerance to herbivory of a salt marsh shrub. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0587.2013.00498.x | ecog-00498.pdf |
E4756 | 2007 | Wildová, R., Wild, J. and Herben, T. 2007. Fine-scale dynamics of rhizomes in a grassland community. – Ecography 30: 264–276. | e4756.pdf |
ECOG-01353 | 2015 | Williams, G. J., Gove, J. M., Eynaud, Y., Zgliczynski, B. J. and Sandin, S. A. 2015. Local human impacts decouple natural biophysical relationships on Pacific coral reefs. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.01353 | ecog-01353.zip |
ECOG-04806 | 2019 | Williams, J. J., Bates, A. E. and Newbold, T. 2019. Human-dominated land uses favour species affiliated with more extreme climates, especially in the tropics. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ecog.04806 | ecog-04806.pdf |
ECOG-03074 | 2017 | Williams, P. H., Lobo, J. M. and Meseguer, A. S. 2017. Bumblebees take the high road: climatically integrative biogeography shows that escape from Tibet, not Tibetan uplift, is associated with divergences of presentday Mendacibombus. – Ecography doi: 10.1111/ ecog.03074 | ecog-03074.pdf |