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A global database for metacommunity ecology, integrating species, traits, environment and space.

Authors :
Jeliazkov A
Mijatovic D
Chantepie S
Andrew N
Arlettaz R
Barbaro L
Barsoum N
Bartonova A
Belskaya E
Bonada N
Brind'Amour A
Carvalho R
Castro H
Chmura D
Choler P
Chong-Seng K
Cleary D
Cormont A
Cornwell W
de Campos R
de Voogd N
Doledec S
Drew J
Dziock F
Eallonardo A
Edgar MJ
Farneda F
Hernandez DF
Frenette-Dussault C
Fried G
Gallardo B
Gibb H
Gonçalves-Souza T
Higuti J
Humbert JY
Krasnov BR
Saux EL
Lindo Z
Lopez-Baucells A
Lowe E
Marteinsdottir B
Martens K
Meffert P
Mellado-Díaz A
Menz MHM
Meyer CFJ
Miranda JR
Mouillot D
Ossola A
Pakeman R
Pavoine S
Pekin B
Pino J
Pocheville A
Pomati F
Poschlod P
Prentice HC
Purschke O
Raevel V
Reitalu T
Renema W
Ribera I
Robinson N
Robroek B
Rocha R
Shieh SH
Spake R
Staniaszek-Kik M
Stanko M
Tejerina-Garro FL
Braak CT
Urban MC
Klink RV
Villéger S
Wegman R
Westgate MJ
Wolff J
Żarnowiec J
Zolotarev M
Chase JM
Source :
Scientific data [Sci Data] 2020 Jan 08; Vol. 7 (1), pp. 6. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Jan 08.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The use of functional information in the form of species traits plays an important role in explaining biodiversity patterns and responses to environmental changes. Although relationships between species composition, their traits, and the environment have been extensively studied on a case-by-case basis, results are variable, and it remains unclear how generalizable these relationships are across ecosystems, taxa and spatial scales. To address this gap, we collated 80 datasets from trait-based studies into a global database for metaCommunity Ecology: Species, Traits, Environment and Space; "CESTES". Each dataset includes four matrices: species community abundances or presences/absences across multiple sites, species trait information, environmental variables and spatial coordinates of the sampling sites. The CESTES database is a live database: it will be maintained and expanded in the future as new datasets become available. By its harmonized structure, and the diversity of ecosystem types, taxonomic groups, and spatial scales it covers, the CESTES database provides an important opportunity for synthetic trait-based research in community ecology.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2052-4463
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Scientific data
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31913312
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-019-0344-7