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-00057 2013

Heino, J. and Grönroos, M. 2013. Does environmental heterogeneity affect species co-occurrence in ecological guilds across stream macroinvertebrate metacommunities? – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00057.pdf
ECOG-00060 2013

Heegaard, E., Gjerde, I. and Sætersdal, M. 2013. Contribution of rare and common species to richness patterns at local scales. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00060.pdf
ECOG-00077 2013

Suárez-Seoane, S., Virgós, E., Terroba, O., Pardavila, X. and Barea-Azcón, J. M. 2013. Scaling of species distribution models across spatial resolutions and extents along a biogeographic gradient. The case of the Iberian mole Talpa occidentalis. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00077.pdf
ECOG-00078 2013

Rich, M. E., Gough, L. and Boelman, N. T. 2013. Arctic arthropod assemblages in habitats of differing shrub dominance. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00078.pdf
ECOG-00095 2013

Medina, N. G., Albertos, B., Lara, F., Mazimpaka, V., Garilleti, R., Draper, D. and Hortal, J. 2013. Species richness of epiphytic bryophytes: drivers across scales on the edge of the Mediterranean. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00095.pdf
ECOG-00102 2013

Sutcliffe, P. R., Mellin, C., Pitcher, C. R., Possingham, H. P. and Caley, M. J. 2013. Regional-scale patterns and predictors of species richness and abundance across twelve major tropical inter-reef taxa. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00102.pdf
ECOG-00107 2013

Smith, A. B., Santos, M. J., Koo, M. S., Rowe, K. M. C., Patton, J. L., Perrine, J. D., Beissinger, S. R. and Moritz, C. 2013. Evaluation of species distribution models by resampling of sites surveyed a century ago by Joseph Grinnell. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00107.pdf
ECOG-00122 2013

Beaudrot, L., Rejmánek, M. and Marshall, A. J. 2013. Dispersal modes affect tropical forest assembly across trophic levels. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00122.pdf
ECOG-00127 2013

Madon, B., Warton, D. I. and Araújo, M. B. 2013. Community-level vs species-specific approaches to model selection. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00127.pdf
ECOG-00138 2013

Braunisch, V., Coppes, J., Schmid, H., Suchant, R., Arlettaz, R. and Bollmann, K. 2013. Selecting from correlated climate variables: a major source of uncertainty for predicting species distributions under climate change. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00138.pdf
ECOG-00147 2013

Fordham, D. A., Akçakaya, H. R., Araújo, M. B., Keith, D. A. and Brook, B. W. 2013. Tools for integrating range change, extinction risk and climate change information into conservation management. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00147.pdf
ECOG-00155 2013

Arnan, X., Cerdá, X., Rodrigo, A. and Retana, J. 2013. Response of ant functional composition to fire. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.
 

ecog-00155.pdf
ECOG-00175 2013

Bellier, E., Grøtan, V., Engen, S., Schartau, A.-K., Herfindal, I. and Finstad, A. G. 2013. Distance decay of similarity, eects of environmental noise and heterogeneity among species in the spatio-temporal dynamics of a dispersal-limited community. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00175.pdf
ECOG-00185 2013

Auffret, A. G. and Cousins, S. A. O. 2013. Grassland connectivity by roads, motor vehicles and grazing livestock. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00185.pdf
ECOG-00188 2013

Ulrich, W. and Fattorini, S. 2013. Longitudinal gradients in the phylogenetic community structure of European Tenebrionidae (Coleoptera) do not coincide with the major routes of postglacial colonization. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00188.pdf
ecog-00188_appendix1.xls
ecog-00188_appendix3.xls
ECO-00192 2013

Fayle, T. M., Turner, E. C. and Foster, W. A. 2013. Ant mosaics occur in SE Asian oil palm plantation but not rain forest and are influenced by the presence of nest-sites and non-native species. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00192.pdf
ECOG-00195 2013

Hanspach, J., Schweiger, O., Kühn, I., Plattner, M., Pearman, P. B., Zimmermann, N. E. and Settele, J. 2013. Host plant availability potentially limits butterfly distributions under cold environmental conditions. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00195.pdf
ECOG-00197 2013

Fisichelli, N. A., Frelich, L. E. and Reich, P. B. 2013. Temperate tree expansion into adjacent boreal forest patches facilitated by warmer temperatures. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00197.pdf
ECOG-00201 2013

Dalsgaard, B., Trøjelsgaard, K., Martín González, A. M., Nogués-Bravo, D., Ollerton, J., Petanidou, T., Sandel, B., Schleuning, M., Wang, Z., Rahbek, C., Sutherland, W. J., Svenning, J.-C. and Olesen, J. M. 2013. Historical climate-change influences modularity and nestedness of pollination networks. – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00201.pdf
ECOG-00205 2013

Naimi, B., Hamm, N. A. S., Groen, T. A., Skidmore, A. K. and Toxopeus, A. G. 2013. Where is positional
uncertainty a problem for species distribution modelling? – Ecography 36: xxx–xxx.

ecog-00205.pdf

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