scholarly journals TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIATION OF SOIL EROSION IN CENTRAL YUNNAN PROVINCE, CHINA

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 6691-6712
Author(s):  
Z.Y. LIU ◽  
J.P. ZHANG ◽  
J.L. WANG
2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (11) ◽  
pp. 2141-2155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judit Rubio‐Delgado ◽  
Susanne Schnabel ◽  
Álvaro Gómez‐Gutiérrez ◽  
Joaquín Francisco Lavado‐Contador

Paleobiology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 171-177
Author(s):  
James C. Lamsdell ◽  
Curtis R. Congreve

The burgeoning field of phylogenetic paleoecology (Lamsdell et al. 2017) represents a synthesis of the related but differently focused fields of macroecology (Brown 1995) and macroevolution (Stanley 1975). Through a combination of the data and methods of both disciplines, phylogenetic paleoecology leverages phylogenetic theory and quantitative paleoecology to explain the temporal and spatial variation in species diversity, distribution, and disparity. Phylogenetic paleoecology is ideally situated to elucidate many fundamental issues in evolutionary biology, including the generation of new phenotypes and occupation of previously unexploited environments; the nature of relationships among character change, ecology, and evolutionary rates; determinants of the geographic distribution of species and clades; and the underlying phylogenetic signal of ecological selectivity in extinctions and radiations. This is because phylogenetic paleoecology explicitly recognizes and incorporates the quasi-independent nature of evolutionary and ecological data as expressed in the dual biological hierarchies (Eldredge and Salthe 1984; Congreve et al. 2018; Fig. 1), incorporating both as covarying factors rather than focusing on one and treating the other as error within the dataset.


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