Species Distribution Models: Ecological Explanation and Prediction Across Space and Time
The University of Melbourne · National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
Abstract
Species distribution models (SDMs) are numerical tools that combine observations of species occurrence or abundance with environmental estimates. They are used to gain ecological and evolutionary insights and to predict distributions across landscapes, sometimes requiring extrapolation in space and time. SDMs are now widely used across terrestrial, freshwater, and marine realms. Differences in methods between disciplines reflect both differences in species mobility and in “established use.” Model realism and robustness is influenced by selection of relevant predictors and modeling method, consideration of scale, how the interplay between environmental and geographic factors is handled, and the extent of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 190.77
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 124
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Extrapolation
- Robustness (evolution)
- Ecology
- Species distribution
- Abundance (ecology)
- Relative abundance distribution
- Relative species abundance
- Environmental science
- Life below water