Authors
Mary Susanne Wisz, Julien Pottier, W Daniel Kissling, Loïc Pellissier, Jonathan Lenoir, Christian F Damgaard, Carsten F Dormann, Mads C Forchhammer, John‐Arvid Grytnes, Antoine Guisan, Risto K Heikkinen, Toke T Høye, Ingolf Kühn, Miska Luoto, Luigi Maiorano, Marie‐Charlotte Nilsson, Signe Normand, Erik Öckinger, Niels M Schmidt, Mette Termansen, Allan Timmermann, David A Wardle, Peter Aastrup, Jens‐Christian Svenning
Publication date
2013/2
Source
Biological reviews
Volume
88
Issue
1
Pages
15-30
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Predicting which species will occur together in the future, and where, remains one of the greatest challenges in ecology, and requires a sound understanding of how the abiotic and biotic environments interact with dispersal processes and history across scales. Biotic interactions and their dynamics influence species' relationships to climate, and this also has important implications for predicting future distributions of species. It is already well accepted that biotic interactions shape species' spatial distributions at local spatial extents, but the role of these interactions beyond local extents (e.g. 10 km2 to global extents) are usually dismissed as unimportant. In this review we consolidate evidence for how biotic interactions shape species distributions beyond local extents and review methods for integrating biotic interactions into species distribution modelling tools. Drawing upon evidence from contemporary and …
Total citations
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