M
Marta Rueda
Researcher at Spanish National Research Council
Publications - 33
Citations - 1230
Marta Rueda is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Biodiversity. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 30 publications receiving 1004 citations. Previous affiliations of Marta Rueda include University of Alcalá & University of California, Irvine.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Coefficient shifts in geographical ecology: an empirical evaluation of spatial and non-spatial regression
L. Mauricio Bini,J . Alexandre F. Diniz‐Filho,Thiago F. Rangel,Thomas S. B. Akre,Rafael G. Albaladejo,Fábio Suzart de Albuquerque,Abelardo Aparicio,Miguel B. Araújo,Andrés Baselga,Jan Beck,M. Isabel Bellocq,Katrin Böhning-Gaese,Paulo A. V. Borges,Isabel Castro-Parga,Vun Khen Chey,Steven L. Chown,Paulo De Marco,David S. Dobkin,Dolores Ferrer-Castán,Richard Field,Julieta Filloy,Erica Fleishman,José F. Gómez,Joaquín Hortal,John B. Iverson,Jeremy T. Kerr,W. Daniel Kissling,Ian J. Kitching,Jorge L. León-Cortés,Jorge M. Lobo,Daniel Montoya,Ignacio Morales-Castilla,Juan Castañer Moreno,Thierry Oberdorff,Miguel Á. Olalla-Tárraga,Juli G. Pausas,Hong Qian,Carsten Rahbek,Miguel Á. Rodríguez,Marta Rueda,Adriana Ruggiero,Paula Sackmann,Nathan J. Sanders,Levi Carina Terribile,Ole R. Vetaas,Bradford A. Hawkins +45 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the relationship between environmental predictors and the geographical distribution of species richness, body size, range size and abundance in 97 multi-factorial data sets and concluded that the ecological importance of regression coefficients cannot be evaluated with confidence irrespective of whether spatially explicit or non-spatial modeling is used.
Journal ArticleDOI
Community phylogenetics at the biogeographical scale: cold tolerance, niche conservatism and the structure of North American forests
Bradford A. Hawkins,Marta Rueda,Thiago F. Rangel,Richard Field,José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho +4 more
TL;DR: Tropical niche conservatism in the face of long-term climate change, probably initiated in the Late Cretaceous associated with the rise of the Rocky Mountains, is a strong driver of the phylogenetic structure of the angiosperm component of forest communities across the USA.
Journal ArticleDOI
Change in dominance determines herbivore effects on plant biodiversity
Sally E. Koerner,Melinda D. Smith,Deron E. Burkepile,Niall P. Hanan,Meghan L. Avolio,Scott L. Collins,Alan K. Knapp,Nathan P. Lemoine,Elisabeth J. Forrestel,Stephanie Eby,Dave I. Thompson,Gerardo A. Aguado-Santacruz,John P. Anderson,T. Michael Anderson,Ayana Angassa,Ayana Angassa,Sumanta Bagchi,Elisabeth S. Bakker,Gary Bastin,Lauren E. Baur,Karen H. Beard,Erik A. Beever,Erik A. Beever,Patrick J. Bohlen,Elizabeth H. Boughton,Don Canestro,Ariela Cesa,Enrique J. Chaneton,Jimin Cheng,Carla M. D'Antonio,Claire Deléglise,Fadiala Dembélé,Josh Dorrough,David J. Eldridge,Barbara Fernandez-Going,Silvia Fernández-Lugo,Lauchlan H. Fraser,Bill Freedman,Gonzalo García-Salgado,Jacob R. Goheen,Liang Guo,Sean W. Husheer,Moussa Karembé,Johannes M. H. Knops,Tineke Kraaij,Andrew Kulmatiski,Minna-Maarit Kytöviita,Felipe Lezama,Grégory Loucougaray,Alejandro Loydi,Dan G. Milchunas,Suzanne J. Milton,John W. Morgan,Claire Moxham,Kyle C. Nehring,Han Olff,Todd M. Palmer,Salvador Rebollo,Corinna Riginos,Anita C. Risch,Marta Rueda,Mahesh Sankaran,Mahesh Sankaran,Takehiro Sasaki,Kathryn A. Schoenecker,Nick L. Schultz,Martin Schütz,Angelika Schwabe,F. Siebert,Christian Smit,Karen A. Stahlheber,Christian Storm,Dustin J. Strong,Jishuai Su,Yadugiri V. Tiruvaimozhi,Claudia M. Tyler,James Val,Martijn L. Vandegehuchte,Martijn L. Vandegehuchte,Kari E. Veblen,Lance T. Vermeire,David Ward,Jianshuang Wu,Truman P. Young,Qiang Yu,Tamara J. Zelikova +85 more
TL;DR: It is shown that herbivore-induced change in dominance, independent of site productivity or precipitation (a proxy for productivity), is the best predictor of Herbivore effects on biodiversity in grassland and savannah sites.
Journal ArticleDOI
Synchrony matters more than species richness in plant community stability at a global scale.
Enrique Valencia,Francesco de Bello,Thomas Galland,Peter B. Adler,Peter B. Adler,Jan Lepš,Anna E-Vojtkó,Roel van Klink,Carlos P. Carmona,Carlos P. Carmona,Jiří Danihelka,Jürgen Dengler,David J. Eldridge,Marc Estiarte,Ricardo García-González,Eric Garnier,Daniel Gómez-García,Susan Harrison,Susan Harrison,Susan Harrison,Tomáš Herben,Ricardo Ibáñez,Anke Jentsch,Norbert Juergens,Miklós Kertész,Katja Klumpp,Frédérique Louault,Rob H. Marrs,Romà Ogaya,Gábor Ónodi,Robin J. Pakeman,Robin J. Pakeman,Iker Pardo,Meelis Pärtel,Meelis Pärtel,Begoña Peco,Josep Peñuelas,Richard F. Pywell,Marta Rueda,Wolfgang Schmidt,Ute Schmiedel,Martin Schuetz,Hana Skálová,Petr Šmilauer,Marie Šmilauerová,Marie Šmilauerová,Christian Smit,Minghua Song,Martin Stock,James Val,Vigdis Vandvik,Vigdis Vandvik,David Ward,Karsten Wesche,Susan K Wiser,Susan K Wiser,Ben A. Woodcock,Truman P. Young,Fei-Hai Yu,Martin Zobel,Martin Zobel,Lars Götzenberger +61 more
TL;DR: Stability was associated more strongly with the degree of synchrony among dominant species than with species richness, which is consistent with theory predicting that the effect of richness on stability weakens when synchrony is higher than expected under random fluctuations, which was the case in most communities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Identifying global zoogeographical regions: lessons from Wallace
TL;DR: Using a recently developed quantitative method, the world's zoogeographical regions are evaluated following Alfred Russel Wallace's criteria as closely as possible.