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Island ecology and contingent theory: the role of spatial scale and taxonomic bias
Authors:András Báldi  Duncan McCollin†
Institution:Animal Ecology Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Ludovika tér 2, Budapest, Hungary, H-1083, E-mail: ,;Landscape and Biodiversity Research Group, School of Environmental Science, University College Northampton, Park Campus, Northampton NN2 7AL, U.K., E-mail:
Abstract:Scale, the scale dependency of patterns and processes, and the ways that organisms scale their responses to these patterns and processes are central to island and landscape ecology. Here, we take a database of studies in island ecology and investigate how studies have changed over a 40-year period with respect to spatial scale and organisms studied. We demonstrate that there have been changes in the spatial scale of islands studied and that there is taxonomic bias in favour of vertebrates in island ecological studies when compared to scientific publications as a whole. We discuss how such taxonomic bias may have arisen and discuss the implications for ecology and biogeography.
Keywords:invertebrates  island area  island biogeography  island ecology  plants  spatial scale  vertebrates
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