WebbThe Problem of Pattern and Scale in Ecology. Ecology 73: 1943–1967. Article Google Scholar Loehle C., Li B-L. and Sundell R.C. 1996. Forest spread and phase transitions at forest-prairie ecotones in Kansas, U.S.A. Landscape Ecology 11: 225–235. Article Google Scholar McGarigal K. and Marks B.J. 1995. WebbThe Problem of Pattern and Scale in Ecology: The Robert H. MacArthur Award Lecture Author(s): Simon A. Levin Source: Ecology, Vol. 73, No. 6 (Dec., 1992), pp. 1943-1967 …
THE PROBLEM OF PATTERN AND SCALE IN ECOLOGY
WebbMentioning: 33 - Summary1. Species turnover, b-diversity, underpins a number of ecological processes that define patterns of diversity. Estimates of b-diversity are dependent upon the spatial scale investigated, and patterns may vary across spatial scales. This presents us with a logistical problem of how to sample sufficiently at fine, local scales through to … WebbIt is only in the last few decades that researchers have begun to see how deep groundwater can be brought up to hydrate the landscape during dry season - the hydration of which can help with the reduction of wildfire risk, and the cooling of the planet. A dynamical dance of water underneath the earth's surface is influencing what we see above." greenspring medical baltimore
Spatiotemporal scaling of species richness: patterns, processes, …
WebbThe Problem of Pattern and Scale in Ecology Simon A. Levin Chapter Abstract This book is the second of two volumes in a series on terrestrial and marine comparisons, focusing … WebbApplied challenges, such as the prediction of the ecological causes and consequences of global climate change, require the interfacing of phenomena that occur on very different scales of space, time, and ecological organization. WebbEcosystem dynamics provides an interesting arena for the application of a plethora concepts and techniques from statistical mechanics. Here I review three examples corresponding each one to an important problem in ecology. First, I start with an analytical derivation of clumpy patterns for species relative abundances (SRA) empirically … fnaf abomination