The reliability ofR50as a measure of vulnerability of food webs to sequential species deletions
Published 2014 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
The reliability ofR50as a measure of vulnerability of food webs to sequential species deletions
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
OIKOS
Volume 124, Issue 4, Pages 446-457
Publisher
Wiley
Online
2014-09-25
DOI
10.1111/oik.01588
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Ecological communities are vulnerable to realistic extinction sequences
- (2014) Sofia Berg et al. OIKOS
- The loss of indirect interactions leads to cascading extinctions of carnivores
- (2013) Dirk Sanders et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- High frequency of functional extinctions in ecological networks
- (2013) Torbjörn Säterberg et al. NATURE
- Coextinction and Persistence of Dependent Species in a Changing World
- (2012) Robert K. Colwell et al. Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics
- Robustness to secondary extinctions: Comparing trait-based sequential deletions in static and dynamic food webs
- (2011) Alva Curtsdotter et al. BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY
- Strong contributors to network persistence are the most vulnerable to extinction
- (2011) Serguei Saavedra et al. NATURE
- Has the Earth’s sixth mass extinction already arrived?
- (2011) Anthony D. Barnosky et al. NATURE
- Using sensitivity analysis to identify keystone species and keystone links in size-based food webs
- (2011) Sofia Berg et al. OIKOS
- Early Warnings of Regime Shifts: A Whole-Ecosystem Experiment
- (2011) S. R. Carpenter et al. SCIENCE
- Trophic Downgrading of Planet Earth
- (2011) James A. Estes et al. SCIENCE
- Structural dynamics and robustness of food webs
- (2010) Phillip P. A. Staniczenko et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- The Serengeti food web: empirical quantification and analysis of topological changes under increasing human impact
- (2010) Sara N. de Visser et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
- Stability of Ecological Communities and the Architecture of Mutualistic and Trophic Networks
- (2010) E. Thebault et al. SCIENCE
- Scenarios for Global Biodiversity in the 21st Century
- (2010) H. M. Pereira et al. SCIENCE
- Trophic field overlap: A new approach to quantify keystone species
- (2009) Ferenc Jordán et al. ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
- Press perturbations and indirect effects in real food webs
- (2009) JoséM. Montoya et al. ECOLOGY
- Understanding food-web persistence from local to global scales
- (2009) Daniel B. Stouffer et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- The robustness of keystone indices in food webs
- (2009) Anna Fedor et al. JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY
- Early-warning signals for critical transitions
- (2009) Marten Scheffer et al. NATURE
- The assembly and disassembly of ecological networks
- (2009) J. Bascompte et al. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- Cascading extinctions and community collapse in model food webs
- (2009) J. A. Dunne et al. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- Googling Food Webs: Can an Eigenvector Measure Species' Importance for Coextinctions?
- (2009) Stefano Allesina et al. PLoS Computational Biology
- Trophically Unique Species Are Vulnerable to Cascading Extinction
- (2008) Owen L. Petchey et al. AMERICAN NATURALIST
Add your recorded webinar
Do you already have a recorded webinar? Grow your audience and get more views by easily listing your recording on Peeref.
Upload NowBecome a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get Started