Pages that link to "Q39591750"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Recruitment in tropical tree species: revealing complex spatial patterns (Q39591750):
Displaying 33 items.
- Evidence for the spatial segregation hypothesis: a test with nine-year survivorship data in a Mediterranean shrubland (Q33660680) (← links)
- Size-class effect contributes to tree species assembly through influencing dispersal in tropical forests (Q34255100) (← links)
- Spatial distribution and interspecific associations of tree species in a tropical seasonal rain forest of China (Q34430781) (← links)
- Spatial patterns and natural recruitment of native shrubs in a semi-arid sandy land (Q34625731) (← links)
- The relative importance of Janzen-Connell effects in influencing the spatial patterns at the Gutianshan subtropical forest (Q34990134) (← links)
- Maintaining distances with the engineer: patterns of coexistence in plant communities beyond the patch-bare dichotomy. (Q35192990) (← links)
- Nonrandom seedling establishment corresponds with distance-dependent decline in mycorrhizal abundance in two terrestrial orchids (Q35923518) (← links)
- Spatial patterns of an endemic Mediterranean palm recolonizing old fields (Q36235191) (← links)
- Seed dispersal effectiveness revisited: a conceptual review. (Q37776754) (← links)
- Drought tolerance as a driver of tropical forest assembly: resolving spatial signatures for multiple processes (Q38895276) (← links)
- Hierarchical mechanisms of spatially contagious seed dispersal in complex seed-disperser networks (Q39222566) (← links)
- Using codispersion analysis to characterize spatial patterns in species co-occurrences (Q39893568) (← links)
- Distance-dependent seedling mortality and long-term spacing dynamics in a neotropical forest community (Q46294357) (← links)
- Environmental heterogeneity blurs the signature of dispersal syndromes on spatial patterns of woody species in a moist tropical forest (Q49925432) (← links)
- Stochastically driven adult-recruit associations of tree species on Barro Colorado Island (Q51427763) (← links)
- Modeling spatial aggregation of finite populations (Q51607741) (← links)
- Spatial analyses of Ediacaran communities at Mistaken Point (Q56520746) (← links)
- Consequences of Seed Dispersal for Plant Recruitment in Tropical Forests: Interactions Within the Seedscape (Q57044290) (← links)
- Envelope tests for spatial point patterns with and without simulation (Q57122091) (← links)
- Linking trait similarity to interspecific spatial associations in a moist tropical forest (Q57122177) (← links)
- A systematic comparison of summary characteristics for quantifying point patterns in ecology (Q57122295) (← links)
- Phylogenetic and functional diversity area relationships in two temperate forests (Q57122358) (← links)
- Quantifying spatial phylogenetic structures of fully stem-mapped plant communities (Q57122369) (← links)
- Individual species-area relationships and spatial patterns of species diversity in a Great Basin, semi-arid shrubland (Q57122497) (← links)
- Marked point pattern analysis on genetic paternity data for uncertainty assessment of pollen dispersal kernels (Q57122525) (← links)
- Spatial patterns of tree species richness in two temperate forests (Q57122641) (← links)
- Effects of sampling scale on patterns of habitat association in tropical trees (Q57266175) (← links)
- Forest dynamics of a subtropical monsoon forest in Dinghushan, China: recruitment, mortality and the pace of community change (Q58618477) (← links)
- The importance of neutral over niche processes in structuring Ediacaran early animal communities (Q90085575) (← links)
- Disentangling the functional trait correlates of spatial aggregation in tropical forest trees (Q90736651) (← links)
- Seed-to-seedling transitions exhibit distance-dependent mortality but no strong spacing effects in a Neotropical forest (Q91290437) (← links)
- Advancing an interdisciplinary framework to study seed dispersal ecology (Q94453383) (← links)
- Endozoochory of Chrysobalanus icaco (Cocoplum) by Gopherus polyphemus (Gopher Tortoise) facilitates rapid germination and colonization in a suburban nature preserve (Q97644984) (← links)