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Macroecology





Encyclopedia results for Macroecology

  1. Macroecology

    nocitations date August 2011 Macroecology is the subfield of ecology that deals with the study of relationships between organisms and their natural environment environment at large spatial scales to characterise and explain statistical patterns of abundance, distribution and diversity. citation needed date February 2012 The term was coined by James Brown ecologist James Brown of the University of New Mexico and Brian Maurer of Michigan State University in a 1989 paper in Science . citation needed date February 2012 Macroecology approaches the idea of studying ecosystems using a top down approach. It seeks understanding through the study of the properties of the system as a whole Kevin Gaston and Tim Blackburn make the analogy to seeing the forest for the trees literally . citation needed date February 2012 Macroecology examines how global development in climate change affect wildlife populations. Classic ecological questions amenable to study through the techniques of macroecology include questions of species richness , latitudinal gradients in species diversity , the species area curve , range size, body size, and species abundance. For example, the relationship between abundance and range size why species that maintain large local population sizes tend to be widely distributed, while species that are less abundant tend to have restricted ranges has received much attention c.f. sampling artifact . citation needed date February 2012 References portal Ecology Brown, J.H and B.A. Maurer. 1989. Macroecology The division of food and space among species on continents. Science 243 1145 1150 Brown, J.H. 1995. Macroecology . University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0 226 07614 8 Gaston, K.J. and T.M. Blackburn. 2000. Pattern and Process in Macroecology . Blackwell Science. ISBN 0 632 05653 ... and Biogeography an important journal of macroecology http www.blackwellpublishing.com journal.asp ... http www.evolutionary ecology.com Evolutionary Ecology Research a journal of macroecology modelling ...   more details



  1. Global Ecology and Biogeography

    Infobox journal title Global Ecology and Biogeography cover editor David J. Currie discipline Conservation , biogeography publisher Wiley Blackwell country frequency Bimonthly history 1993 present openaccess license impact 5.273 impact year 2010 website http onlinelibrary.wiley.com journal 10.1111 ISSN 1466 8238 link1 http onlinelibrary.wiley.com doi 10.1111 geb.2012.21.issue 1 issuetoc link1 name Online access link2 http onlinelibrary.wiley.com journal 10.1111 ISSN 1466 8238 issues link2 name Online archive ISSN 1466 8238 Global Ecology and Biogeography is a bimonthly peer reviewed scientific journal that was established in 1991. It covers research in the field of macroecology . The current editor in chief is David J. Currie. According to the Journal Citation Reports , the journal has a 2010 impact factor of 5.273, ranking it first among 42 journals in the category Geography, Physical and 10th out of 129 journals in the category Ecology . External links Official 1 http onlinelibrary.wiley.com journal 10.1111 ISSN 1466 8238 Category Wiley Blackwell academic journals Category Ecology journals Category Bimonthly journals Category Publications established in 1993 Category English language journals ...   more details



  1. Phytogeography

    to plants represent another area of phytogeography. Recently, a new field termed macroecology .... Macroecology focuses as much on other organisms as plants. Branches of biology relevant to phytogeography ... province . See also Biogeography Botany Geobotanical prospecting Macroecology Species distribution ...   more details



  1. Taxonomic inflation

    Taxonomic inflation is a pejorative term for what is perceived to be an excessive increase in the number of recognised taxa in a given context, due not to the discovery of new taxa but rather to putatively arbitrary changes to how taxa are delineated. The best known case is the elevation of a group of subspecies to species rank, through the arbitrary decision that the differences between the various taxa warrant distinguishing them at species rank. Taxonomic inflation is often claimed to occur for Conservation ethic conservation reasons. It may be difficult to make a case for the protection of an isolated and unusual population of a common and widespread species, but it becomes much easier to do so if that population is recognised as a rare subspecies or species. ref name Isaac 2004 cite journal author Isaac, Nick Mallet, James Mace, Georgina year 2004 title Taxonomic inflation its influence on macroecology and conservation journal TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution volume 19 issue 9 pages 464 469 url http www.ucl.ac.uk taxome jim pap isaac04.pdf accessdate 2011 02 23 ref ref name Economist cite journal title Hail Linnaeus journal The Economist issue May 17, 2007 url http www.economist.com node 9191545?story id 9191545 accessdate 2011 02 23 ref References reflist Category Taxonomy ...   more details



  1. James Brown (ecologist)

    of Mammalogists. Brown, J.H. 1995. Macroecology . University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Brown ...   more details



  1. Ecology (disciplines)

    Unreferenced date December 2009 Orphan date December 2009 Ecology is a broad biological science and can be divided into many sub disciplines using various criteria. Many of these fields overlap, complement and inform each other. Indeed, few of these disciplines exist in isolation. For example, the population ecology of an organism is a consequence of its behavioral ecology and intimately tied to its community ecology . Methods from molecular ecology might inform the study of the population, and all kinds of data are modeled and analyzed using quantitative ecology techniques. When discussing the study of a single species, a distinction is usually made between its biology and its ecology . For example, polar bear biology might include the study of the polar bear s physiology , morphology biology morphology , pathology and ontogeny , whereas polar bear ecology would include a study of its prey species, its population and metapopulation status, distribution, dependence on environmental conditions, etc. In that sense, there can be as many subdisciplines of ecology as there are species to study. Other criteria Ecology can also be classified on the basis of the primary kinds of organism under study, e.g. animal ecology , plant ecology , insect ecology the biomes principally studied, e.g. forest ecology , grassland ecology , desert ecology , benthic ecology , marine ecology , urban ecology the geographic or climatic area, e.g. arctic ecology , tropical ecology the spatial scale under consideration, e.g. macroecology , landscape ecology the philosophical approach, e.g. systems ecology which adopts a holistic approach the methods used, e.g. molecular ecology . List of subdisciplines Specialized branches of ecology include, among others DEFAULTSORT Ecology Disciplines Category Ecology ...   more details



  1. Ecology Letters

    Infobox journal title Ecology Letters abbreviation Ecol. Lett. cover File ELECover.gif discipline Ecology editor Marcel Holyoak frequency Monthly website http www.wiley.com bw journal.asp?ref 1461 023x link1 http onlinelibrary.wiley.com journal 10.1111 28ISSN 291461 0248 link1 name Online access publisher Wiley Blackwell country history 1998 present impact 15.253 impact year 2010 ISSN 1461 023X eISSN 1461 0248 CODEN ECLEFU LCCN sn98015378 OCLC 40121970 Ecology Letters is a peer review peer reviewed scientific journal published by Wiley Blackwell and the French National Centre for Scientific Research Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique . Marcel Holyoak University of California, Davis took over as editor in chief from Michael Hochberg in 2008. It is published monthly in print and online. Abstracting and indexing Ecology Letters is abstracted and indexed in EBSCO Publishing Academic Search Academic Search Premier , AGRICOLA , Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts , Biological Abstracts , BIOSIS Previews BIOSIS and BIOSIS Previews , CAB Direct database CAB Abstracts , CAB Direct database CAB Health CABDirect , CSA database company Cambridge Scientific Abstracts databases , Current Contents Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences, GEOBASE database GEOBASE , GeoRef , Index Medicus MEDLINE , InfoTrac , PubMed , Science Citation Index , Scopus , and The Zoological Record . According to the Journal Citation Reports , the journal has a 2010 impact factor of 15.253, ranking it 66th out of 7943 scientific and medical journals listed and the 1st out of 129 journals in the category Ecology . Topics covered Ecology Letters covers topics in Applied ecology Behavioral ecology Biodiversity Conservation biology Ecological genetics Evolutionary biology Landscape ecology Microecology Macroecology Marine biology Microbial ecology External links Official 1 http www.wiley.com bw journal.asp?ref 1461 023x http www.in cites.com journals EcologyLetters.html Interview with Mi ...   more details



  1. Ecography

    Infobox journal title Ecography cover File Ecography journal .jpg editor Carsten Rahbek discipline Ecology abbreviation Ecography formernames Holartic Ecology publisher Wiley Blackwell country frequency Bimonthly history 1978 present impact 4.385 impact year 2009 website http www.wiley.com bw journal.asp?ref 0906 7590 link1 http onlinelibrary.wiley.com journal 10.1111 28ISSN 291600 0587 link1 name Online access ISSN 0906 7590 CODEN ECOGEG LCCN 92641619 OCLC 50102682 JSTOR 09067590 Ecography is a bimonthly Peer review peer reviewed scientific journal published by Wiley Blackwell on behalf of the Nordic Society Oikos covering the field of spatial ecology . It has been published since 1978, the first 14 volumes under the name Holarctic Ecology . Ecography is published in collaboration with Oikos journal Oikos , Lindbergia , the Journal of Avian Biology , and with the monograph series Ecological Bulletins . According to the Journal Citation Reports , the journal has a 2010 impact factor 4.417, ranking it 22nd out of 129 journals in the category Ecology and 4th out of 33 journals in the category Biodiversity Conservation . ref name WoS cite web url http isiwebofknowledge.com title Web of Science year 2011 accessdate May 5 ref Scope The journal covers the following fields population ecology and community ecology macroecology biogeography ecological conservation References Reflist External links Official website 1 http www.wiley.com bw journal.asp?ref 0906 7590 http www.oikos.ekol.lu.se ecojrnl.html Journal page at Oikos editorial office http onlinelibrary.wiley.com journal 10.1111 28ISSN 291600 0587 homepage virtual issues.htm Virtual Special Issue The patterns and causes of elevational diversity gradients Category Ecology journals Category Publications established in 1978 Category Wiley Blackwell academic journals Category English language journals Category Bimonthly journals de Ecography ...   more details



  1. Outline of ecology

    scale, addressing macroecology macroecological questions Landscape ecology &ndash which studies the interactions ... to ecological events Macroecology &ndash the study of large scale phenomena Microecology ...   more details



  1. Latitudinal gradients in species diversity

    . J. Gaston, editors. Macroecology Concepts and Consequences. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford. Colwell ... in macroecology. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford. Hawkins, B. A., and J. A. F. Diniz Filho. 2002. The mid ... and K. J. Gaston, editors. Macroecology Concepts and Consequences. Blackwell Publishing, Oxford. Storch ...   more details



  1. List of University of New Mexico faculty

    This is a list of past and present faculty members at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico . Faculty Sophie Bledsoe Aberle Glen Adsit Rudolfo Anaya , author of Bless Me, Ultima , professor of English. Edward Angel George Anselevicius Timothy App Archie J. Bahm James R. Barker Robert V. R. Bassett Keith H. Basso Norman Bay Carol Berg James Brown ecologist , biology professor who coined the term macroecology , and member of the National Academy of Science s. Bainbridge Bunting Gregory Cajete Thomas T. Castonguay , a chemical engineering professor whose students developed an early process for reclaiming used motor oil. ref name acs cite web url http www.acs.nm.org archive hist1a.pdf title ACS Central New Mexico Section format PDF date accessdate 2011 03 02 ref Eric Charnov Michael Conniff David King Dunaway Lois Duncan Bradley Ellingboe Christie G. Enke Bill Evans dancer Bill Evans Robert E. Fleming , a professor emeritus of English known for his work related to the literary criticism of Ernest Hemmingway . He recently co edited with Robert W. Lewis an edition of Ernest Hemingway s Under Kilimanjaro . Christian G. Fritz Laura E. G mez Robert E. Haebel , a Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps instructor decorated with the Bronze Star Medal and Purple Heart for combat during the Korean War and Vietnam War and promoted to United States Marine Corps Major General commanding the 3rd Marine Division United States 3rd Marine Division . ref name sunline University of New Mexico NROTC Sun Line Vol. III No. 1 November 1964 ref Frederick Hammersley Fred R. Harris Carl S. Hawkins Florence Hawley Richard Hayes professor Richard Hayes Jane E. Henney M. Miriam Herrera Reuben Hersh Frank C. Hibben , an anthropology professor noted for locating artifacts of Paleo Indians . ref name hibben cite web url http www.unm.edu foundation newsletter 0003hibben.html title Frank Hibben Funds New UNM Anthropology Building publisher Unm.edu date accessdate 2011 03 02 ref Tony Hil ...   more details



  1. Body size and species richness

    , Eurasia and Africa Brown and Maurer, 1989 ref name BrownMaurer1989 Brown JH & Maurer BA 1989 Macroecology ... See also Macroecology Metabolic theory of ecology Niche apportionment models Occupancy abundance ...   more details



  1. Relative species abundance

    theory of biodiversity. In T. Blackburn and K. Gaston, Editors, Macroecology concepts and consequences ..., Macroecology concepts and consequences. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford. ref The shape of this distribution ...   more details



  1. Rapoport's rule

    1995 ref Brown, J. H. 1995 . Macroecology. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. ref . Another explanation ...   more details



  1. Cave hyena

    Plio Pleistocene large carnivores from the Italian peninsula functional morphology and macroecology ...   more details



  1. Occupancy-abundance relationship

    In macroecology , the occupancy abundance O A relationship is the relationship between the abundance of species and the size of their ranges within a region. This relationship is perhaps one of the most well documented relationships in macroecology, and applies both intra and interspecifically within and among species . In most cases, the O A relationship is a positive relationship ref name Gaston 1996 Gaston, K.J. 1996. The multiple forms of the interspecific abundance distribution relationship. Oikos 75 211 220. ref . Although an O A relationship would be expected, given that a species colonizing a region must pass through the origin zero abundance, zero occupancy and could reach some theoretical maximum abundance and distribution that is, occupancy and abundance can be expected to covary , the relationship described here is somewhat more substantial, in that observed changes in range are associated with greater than proportional changes in abundance. Although this relationship appears to be pervasive e.g. Gaston 1996 ref name Gaston 1996 and references therein , and has important implications for the conservation of endangered species , the mechanism s underlying it remain poorly understood ref name Gastonet al 2000 Gaston, K.J., T.M. Blackburn, J.J.D. Greenwood R.D. Gregory, R.M. Quinn, and J.H. Lawton. 2000. Abundance occupancy relationships. Journal of Applied Ecology 37 suppl. 1 39 59. ref Important terms Range means the total area occupied by the species of interest in the region under study see below Which Range Abundance means the average density of the species of interest across all occupied patches i.e. average abundance does not include the area of unoccupied patches Intraspecific occupancy abundance relationship means the relationship between abundance and range ... km to describe breeding bird occupancy in New York State. In much of macroecology, the use of EOO ... ref name Gaston and Blackburn 2000 Gaston, K.J., and T.M. Blackburn. 2000. Pattern and Process in Macroecology ...   more details



  1. Stratigraphy of the Cambrian

    cite journal last1 Butterfield first1 Nicholas J. title Macroevolution and macroecology ...   more details



  1. Biogeography

    Landscape ecology Bibliography of biology Macroecology Phylogeography Phytogeography Phytochorion ...   more details



  1. Index of biology articles

    lytic cycle M macroecology macroevolution macromolecules major histocompatibility complex MHC ...   more details



  1. Metabolic theory of ecology

    The metabolic theory of ecology MTE is an extension of Kleiber s law and posits that the metabolic rate of organisms is the fundamental biological rate that governs most observed patterns in ecology. ref name Brown04 cite journal author Brown, J. H., Gillooly, J. F., Allen, A. P., Savage, V. M., & G. B. West title Toward a metabolic theory of ecology journal Ecology volume 85 issue 7 pages 1771 89 year 2004 doi 10.1890 03 9000 ref MTE is based on an interpretation of the relationships between body size, body temperature, and Metabolism metabolic rate across all organisms. Small bodied organisms tend to have higher mass specific metabolic rates than larger bodied organisms. Furthermore, organisms that operate at warm temperatures through Warm blooded endothermy or by living in warm environments tend towards higher metabolic rates than organisms that operate at colder temperatures. This pattern is consistent from the unicellular level up to the level of the largest animals on the planet. In MTE, this relationship is considered to be the single constraint that defines biological processes at all levels of organization from individual up to ecosystem level , and is a Macroecology macroecological theory that aims to be universal in scope and application. ref name Brown04 Theoretical background Metabolic rate scales with the mass of an organism of a given species according to Kleiber s law where B is whole organism metabolic rate in watts or other unit of power , M is organism mass in kg , and B sub o sub is a mass independent normalization constant given in a unit of power divided by a unit of mass. In this case, watts per kilogram math B B oM 3 4 , math At increased temperatures, chemical reactions proceed faster. This relationship is described by the Boltzmann factor , where E is activation energy in electronvolt s or joule s, t is absolute temperature in kelvins, and k is the Boltzmann constant in eV K or J K math e frac E k ,t math While B sub o sub in the previous e ...   more details



  1. Scaling pattern of occupancy

    In spatial ecology and macroecology , scaling pattern of occupancy SPO , also known as the area of occupancy is the way in which species distribution changes across spatial scales. In physical geography and image analysis , it is similar to the modifiable areal unit problem . Simon A. Levin 1992 ref Levin, SA. 1992. The problem of pattern and scale in ecology. Ecology, 73, 1943&ndash 1967. http www.esajournals.org doi abs 10.2307 1941447 ref states that the problem of relating phenomena across scales is the central problem in biology and in all of science . Understanding the SPO is thus one central theme in ecology. Pattern description This pattern is often plotted as log transformed grain cell size versus log transformed occupancy. Kunin 1998 ref Kunin, WE. 1998. Extrapolating species abundance across spatial scales. Science, 281 1513&ndash 1515. http www.sciencemag.org cgi content full 281 5382 1513 ref presented a log log linear SPO and suggesting a fractal nature of species distribution. In reality, it has been shown to follow a logistic shape, reflecting a percolation process. Furthermore, the SPO is closely related to the intraspecific occupancy abundance relationship . For instance, if individuals are randomly distributed in space, the number of individuals in an size cell follows a Poisson distribution , with the occupancy being P sub sub     1  &minus   exp &minus , where is the density ref Wright, D.H. 1991. Correlations between incidence and abundance are expected by chance. Journal of Biogeography, 18 463&ndash 466. http www.jstor.org stable 2845487 ref . Clearly, P sub sub in this Poisson model for randomly distributed individuals is also the SPO. Other probability distributions, such as the negative binomial distribution , can also be applied for describing the SPO and the occupancy abundance relationship for non randomly distributed individuals ref He, F., Gaston, K.J. 2000. Estimating species abundance from occurrence. American ...   more details



  1. Glossary of ecology

    possible scale, addressing macroecology macroecological questions global ecophagy is a term coined ... equation Describes an ecological predator prey model M macroecology the study of large scale ecological ...   more details



  1. Niche apportionment models

    . W. Blackburn, T. M. 2000 . Macroecology, Oxford, UK Blackwell Science. ref ref Taper, M. L. Marquet ...   more details



  1. Occupancy frequency distribution

    In macroecology and community ecology, an occupancy frequency distribution OFD is the distribution of the numbers of species occupying different numbers of areas. ref name Mcgeoch2002 It was first reported in 1918 by the Danish botanist Christen C. Raunki r in his study on plant communities. The OFD is also known as the species range size distribution in literature. ref name Gaston1996 ref name Gaston1998 Bimodality A typical form of OFD is a bimodal distribution , indicating the species in a community is either rare or common, known as Raunkiaer s law of distribution of frequencies. ref name Papp1997 That is, with each species assigned to one of five 20 wide occupancy classes, Raunkiaer s law predicts bimodal distributions within homogenous plant formations with mode statistics modes in the first 0 20 and last 81 100 classes. ref name Papp1997 Although Raunkiaer s law has long been discounted as an index of plant community homogeneity, ref name Mcintosh1962 the method of using occupancy classes to construct OFDs is still commonly used for both plant and animal assemblages. Henry Gleason commented on this law in a 1929 Ecology journal Ecology article In conclusion we may say that Raunkiaer s law is merely an expression of the fact that in any association there are more species with few individuals than with many, that the law is most apparent when quadrat s are chosen of the most serviceable size to show frequency, and that it is obscured or lost if the quadrats are either too large or too small. citequote date April 2010 Evidently, there are different shapes of OFD found in literature. Tokeshi reported that approximately 46 of observations have a skewness right skewed unimodal distribution unimodal shape , 27 bimodal, and 27 Uniform distribution continuous uniform . ref name Tokeshi1992 Factors As pointed out by Gleason, Citation needed date April 2010 the variety shapes of OFD can be explained, to a large degree, by the sampling grain , extent and intensity. For instance ...   more details



  1. List of effects

    gradients in species diversity Mid domain effect macroecology biogeography biodiversity Mikheyev ...   more details




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