Despite being recognized as a promoter of diversity and a condition for local coexistence decades ago, the importance of intraspecific variance has been neglected over time in community ecology. Recently, there has been a new emphasis on intraspecific variability. Indeed, recent developments in trait-based community ecology have underlined the need to integrate variation at both the intraspecific as well as interspecific level. We introduce new T-statistics (‘T’ for trait), based on the comparison of intraspecific and interspecific variances of functional
traits across organizational levels, to operationally incorporate intraspecific variability into community ecology theory. We show that a focus on the distribution of traits at local and regional scales combined with original analytical tools can provide unique insights into the primary forces structuring communities.
%0 Journal Article
%1 violle_return_2012
%A Violle, Cyrille
%A Enquist, Brian J.
%A McGill, Brian J.
%A Jiang, Lin
%A Albert, Cécile H.
%A Hulshof, Catherine
%A Jung, Vincent
%A Messier, Julie
%D 2012
%J Trends in Ecology & Evolution
%K community ecology, functional traits
%P 1--9
%R 10.1016/j.tree.2011.11.014
%T The return of the variance: intraspecific variability in community ecology
%U http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0169534711003375
%X Despite being recognized as a promoter of diversity and a condition for local coexistence decades ago, the importance of intraspecific variance has been neglected over time in community ecology. Recently, there has been a new emphasis on intraspecific variability. Indeed, recent developments in trait-based community ecology have underlined the need to integrate variation at both the intraspecific as well as interspecific level. We introduce new T-statistics (‘T’ for trait), based on the comparison of intraspecific and interspecific variances of functional
traits across organizational levels, to operationally incorporate intraspecific variability into community ecology theory. We show that a focus on the distribution of traits at local and regional scales combined with original analytical tools can provide unique insights into the primary forces structuring communities.
@article{violle_return_2012,
abstract = {Despite being recognized as a promoter of diversity and a condition for local coexistence decades ago, the importance of intraspecific variance has been neglected over time in community ecology. Recently, there has been a new emphasis on intraspecific variability. Indeed, recent developments in trait-based community ecology have underlined the need to integrate variation at both the intraspecific as well as interspecific level. We introduce new T-statistics (‘T’ for trait), based on the comparison of intraspecific and interspecific variances of functional
traits across organizational levels, to operationally incorporate intraspecific variability into community ecology theory. We show that a focus on the distribution of traits at local and regional scales combined with original analytical tools can provide unique insights into the primary forces structuring communities.},
added-at = {2017-01-09T13:57:26.000+0100},
author = {Violle, Cyrille and Enquist, Brian J. and McGill, Brian J. and Jiang, Lin and Albert, Cécile H. and Hulshof, Catherine and Jung, Vincent and Messier, Julie},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/211d526563e5014d426e91c49d640cc6b/yourwelcome},
doi = {10.1016/j.tree.2011.11.014},
interhash = {3f856e3202ff399c8d05f321f7b2aa4d},
intrahash = {11d526563e5014d426e91c49d640cc6b},
issn = {01695347},
journal = {Trends in Ecology \& Evolution},
keywords = {community ecology, functional traits},
pages = {1--9},
shorttitle = {The return of the variance},
timestamp = {2017-01-09T14:01:11.000+0100},
title = {The return of the variance: intraspecific variability in community ecology},
url = {http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0169534711003375},
urldate = {2012-02-13},
year = 2012
}