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 Descriptionsort descending Documents
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:
evidence from New Guinea. – Ecography 34: xxx–xxx.

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

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