Authors
Jan Beck, Liliana Ballesteros‐Mejia, Carsten M Buchmann, Jürgen Dengler, Susanne A Fritz, Bernd Gruber, Christian Hof, Florian Jansen, Sonja Knapp, Holger Kreft, Anne‐Kathrin Schneider, Marten Winter, Carsten F Dormann
Publication date
2012/8
Journal
Ecography
Volume
35
Issue
8
Pages
673-683
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Over the last two decades, macroecology – the analysis of large‐scale, multi‐species ecological patterns and processes – has established itself as a major line of biological research. Analyses of statistical links between environmental variables and biotic responses have long and successfully been employed as a main approach, but new developments are due to be utilized. Scanning the horizon of macroecology, we identified four challenges that will probably play a major role in the future. We support our claims by examples and bibliographic analyses. 1) Integrating the past into macroecological analyses, e.g. by using paleontological or phylogenetic information or by applying methods from historical biogeography, will sharpen our understanding of the underlying reasons for contemporary patterns. 2) Explicit consideration of the local processes that lead to the observed larger‐scale patterns is necessary to …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Beck, L Ballesteros‐Mejia, CM Buchmann, J Dengler… - Ecography, 2012