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Nicole A. Hill
Researcher at University of Tasmania
Publications - 73
Citations - 3068
Nicole A. Hill is an academic researcher from University of Tasmania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Marine protected area & Biodiversity. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 69 publications receiving 2486 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicole A. Hill include Australian Antarctic Division & University of New South Wales.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Integrating abundance and functional traits reveals new global hotspots of fish diversity
Rick D. Stuart-Smith,Amanda E. Bates,Jonathan S. Lefcheck,J. Emmett Duffy,Susan C. Baker,Russell Thomson,JF Stuart-Smith,Nicole A. Hill,Stuart Kininmonth,Laura Airoldi,Laura Airoldi,Mikel A. Becerro,Stuart Campbell,Terrance P. Dawson,Sergio A. Navarrete,German Soler,Elisabeth M. A. Strain,Trevor J. Willis,Graham J. Edgar +18 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the contribution of species diversity to a range of ecosystem functions varies over large scales, and imply that in tropical regions, which have higher numbers of species, each species contributes proportionally less to community-level ecological processes on average than species in temperate regions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Statistical solutions for error and bias in global citizen science datasets
Tomas J. Bird,Tomas J. Bird,Amanda E. Bates,Jonathan S. Lefcheck,Nicole A. Hill,Russell Thomson,Graham J. Edgar,Rick D. Stuart-Smith,Simon Wotherspoon,Martin Krkošek,JF Stuart-Smith,Gretta T. Pecl,Neville S. Barrett,Stewart Frusher +13 more
TL;DR: chieving the full potential from CS projects requires meta-data describing the sampling process, reference data to allow for standardization, and insightful modeling suitable to the question of interest.
Journal ArticleDOI
Species traits and climate velocity explain geographic range shifts in an ocean‐warming hotspot
Jennifer M. Sunday,Jennifer M. Sunday,Gretta T. Pecl,Stewart Frusher,Alistair J. Hobday,Nicole A. Hill,Neil J. Holbrook,Graham J. Edgar,Rick D. Stuart-Smith,Neville S. Barrett,Thomas Wernberg,Thomas Wernberg,Reg Watson,Dan A. Smale,Elizabeth A. Fulton,Dirk Slawinski,Ming Feng,Ben Radford,Ben Radford,Peter A. Thompson,Amanda E. Bates,Amanda E. Bates +21 more
TL;DR: It is found that small-ranging species are in double jeopardy, with limited ability to escape warming and greater intrinsic vulnerability to stochastic disturbances, and independent support for the hypothesis that species with narrow latitudinal ranges are limited by factors other than climate.
Journal ArticleDOI
A comprehensive evaluation of predictive performance of 33 species distribution models at species and community levels
Anna Norberg,Nerea Abrego,Nerea Abrego,F. Guillaume Blanchet,Frederick R. Adler,Barbara J. Anderson,Jani Anttila,Miguel B. Araújo,Miguel B. Araújo,Miguel B. Araújo,Tad A. Dallas,David B. Dunson,Jane Elith,Scott D. Foster,Richard Fox,Janet Franklin,William Godsoe,Antoine Guisan,Bob O'Hara,Nicole A. Hill,Robert D. Holt,Francis K. C. Hui,Magne Husby,John Atle Kålås,Aleksi Lehikoinen,Miska Luoto,Heidi K. Mod,Graeme Newell,Ian Renner,Tomas Roslin,Tomas Roslin,Janne Soininen,Wilfried Thuiller,Jarno Vanhatalo,David I. Warton,Matt White,Niklaus E. Zimmermann,Dominique Gravel,Otso Ovaskainen,Otso Ovaskainen +39 more
TL;DR: This work compared the predictive performance of 33 variants of 15 widely applied and recently emerged species distribution model approaches in the context of multispecies data, including both joint SDMs that model multiple species together, and stacked SDM that model each species individually combining the predictions afterward.
Journal ArticleDOI
Defining and observing stages of climate-mediated range shifts in marine systems
Amanda E. Bates,Amanda E. Bates,Gretta T. Pecl,Stewart Frusher,Alistair J. Hobday,Thomas Wernberg,Thomas Wernberg,Dan A. Smale,Dan A. Smale,Jennifer M. Sunday,Jennifer M. Sunday,Nicole A. Hill,Nicholas K. Dulvy,Robert K. Colwell,Robert K. Colwell,Neil J. Holbrook,Elizabeth A. Fulton,Dirk Slawinski,Ming Feng,Graham J. Edgar,Ben Radford,Ben Radford,Peter A. Thompson,Reg Watson +23 more
TL;DR: This work focuses on warming-related range shifts in marine systems to describe extensions and contractions as stages, and evaluates the utility of trait-based risk (invasion) and vulnerability (extinction) frameworks for application in a range shift context and finds inadequacies.