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SPECIAL FEATURE
Linking the concept of scale to studies of biological diversity: evolving approaches and tools
Erik A. Beever 1,2*, Robert K. Swihart 3 and Brandon T. Bestelmeyer 4
  1 USGS Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA,   2 NPS Great Lakes Network, 2800 Lake Shore Dr. E., Ashland, Wisconsin 54806, USA,   3 Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA,   4 USDA-Agriculture Research Service, Jornada Experimental Range, Box 30003, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico 88011, USA.
  *Corresponding author. Erik A. Beever, NPS Great Lakes Network, 2800 Lake Shore Dr. E., Ashland, Wisconsin 54806, USA. E-mail: erik_beever@nps.gov
Copyright © 2006 The Authors Journal compilation
© 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
Biodiversity conservation • biological invasions • extent • future challenges • publication chronology • modelling • resolution

ABSTRACT

Although the concepts of scale and biological diversity independently have received rapidly increasing attention in the scientific literature since the 1980s, the rate at which the two concepts have been investigated jointly has grown much more slowly. We find that scale considerations have been incorporated explicitly into six broad areas of investigation related to biological diversity: (1) heterogeneity within and among ecosystems, (2) disturbance ecology, (3) conservation and restoration, (4) invasion biology, (5) importance of temporal scale for understanding processes, and (6) species responses to environmental heterogeneity. In addition to placing the papers of this Special Feature within the context of brief summaries of the expanding literature on these six topics, we provide an overview of tools useful for integrating scale considerations into studies of biological diversity. Such tools include hierarchical and structural-equation modelling, kriging, variable-width buffers, k-fold cross-validation, and cascading graph diagrams, among others. Finally, we address some of the major challenges and research frontiers that remain, and conclude with a look to the future.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1366-9516.2006.00260.x About DOI

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