Cannabis Indica

Authors
James C Stegen, Amy L Freestone, Thomas O Crist, Marti J Anderson, Jonathan M Chase, Liza S Comita, Howard V Cornell, Kendi F Davies, Susan P Harrison, Allen H Hurlbert, Brian D Inouye, Nathan JB Kraft, Jonathan A Myers, Nathan J Sanders, Nathan G Swenson, Mark Vellend
Publication date
2013/2
Journal
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Volume
22
Issue
2
Pages
202-212
Description
Aim
A long‐standing challenge in ecology is to identify the suite of factors that lead to turnover in species composition in both space and time. These factors might be stochastic (e.g. sampling and priority effects) or deterministic (e.g. competition and environmental filtering). While numerous studies have examined the relationship between turnover and individual drivers of interest (e.g. primary productivity, habitat heterogeneity, or regional – ‘gamma’ – diversity), few studies have disentangled the simultaneous influences of multiple stochastic and deterministic processes on both temporal and spatial turnover. If turnover is governed primarily by stochastic sampling processes, removing the sampling effects of gamma diversity should result in non‐significant relationships between turnover and environmental variables. Conversely, if deterministic processes govern turnover patterns, removing sampling effects will have …
Total citations
201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202427141713182015121913912
Scholar articles

Leave a Reply