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Ecological neighborhoods: scaling environmental patterns.

  • J. F. Addicott
  • , J. M. Aho
  • , M. F. Antolin
  • , D. K. Padilla
  • , J. S. Richardson
  • , D. A. Soluk
  • University of Alberta

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

491 Scopus citations

Abstract

Reviews, develops and differentiates between concepts associated with environmental patterning (patch, division, and heterogeneity), spatial and temporal scales of ecological processes (ecological neighborhoods), and responses of organisms to environmental patterning (relative patch size, relative patch duration, relative patch isolation, and grain response). The concept of ecological neighborhoods is generalised to represent regions of activity or influence during periods of time appropriate to particular ecological processes. Neighborhood sizes can be estimated by examining the cumulative distribution of activity or influence of an organism as a function of increasingly large spatial units. The spatial and temporal dimensions of neighborhoods provide the scales necessary for assessing environmental patterning relative to particular ecological processes for a given species. -from Authors

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)340-346
Number of pages7
JournalOikos
Volume49
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1987

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