Authors
Nicolas Mouquet, Vincent Devictor, Christine N Meynard, Francois Munoz, Louis‐Félix Bersier, Jérôme Chave, Pierre Couteron, Ambroise Dalecky, Colin Fontaine, Dominique Gravel, Olivier J Hardy, Franck Jabot, Sébastien Lavergne, Mathew Leibold, David Mouillot, Tamara Münkemüller, Sandrine Pavoine, Andreas Prinzing, Ana SL Rodrigues, Rudolf P Rohr, Elisa Thébault, Wilfried Thuiller
Publication date
2012/11
Source
Biological reviews
Volume
87
Issue
4
Pages
769-785
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Ecophylogenetics can be viewed as an emerging fusion of ecology, biogeography and macroevolution. This new and fast‐growing field is promoting the incorporation of evolution and historical contingencies into the ecological research agenda through the widespread use of phylogenetic data. Including phylogeny into ecological thinking represents an opportunity for biologists from different fields to collaborate and has provided promising avenues of research in both theoretical and empirical ecology, towards a better understanding of the assembly of communities, the functioning of ecosystems and their responses to environmental changes. The time is ripe to assess critically the extent to which the integration of phylogeny into these different fields of ecology has delivered on its promise. Here we review how phylogenetic information has been used to identify better the key components of species interactions with …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Mouquet, V Devictor, CN Meynard, F Munoz… - Biological reviews, 2012