1999
DOI: 10.1890/0012-9658(1999)080[1118:eatqii]2.0.co;2
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Empirical Approaches to Quantifying Interaction Intensity: Competition and Facilitation Along Productivity Gradients

Abstract: Quantitative synthesis across studies requires consistent measures of effect size among studies. In community ecology, these measures of effect size will often be some measure of the strength of interactions between taxa. However, indices of interaction strength vary greatly among both theoretical and empirical studies, and the connection between hypotheses about interaction strength and the metrics that are used to test these hypotheses are often not explicit. We describe criteria for choosing appropriate met… Show more

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Cited by 441 publications
(222 citation statements)
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References 78 publications
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“…These findings are consistent with a series of previous studies, which attempted to distinguish between growth and survival as responses to competition (Kadmon 1995;Callaway & King 1996;Goldberg & Novoplansky 1997;Goldberg et al . 1999;Howard & Goldberg 2001;Hastwell & Facelli 2003;Sher et al .…”
Section:         supporting
confidence: 92%
“…These findings are consistent with a series of previous studies, which attempted to distinguish between growth and survival as responses to competition (Kadmon 1995;Callaway & King 1996;Goldberg & Novoplansky 1997;Goldberg et al . 1999;Howard & Goldberg 2001;Hastwell & Facelli 2003;Sher et al .…”
Section:         supporting
confidence: 92%
“…fitness control was the average score of single cultures per each family line and block. Response ratios, rather than relative competition intensity indices (sensu Weiglet & Jolliffe 2003), are recommended for designs similar to ours, because they are symmetrical for both increases and decreases in fitness relative to controls and do not assume a maximum threshold for competition (Goldberg et al 1999). For statistical analyses (see below), log link function was implemented for response ratios, which improves statistical properties of the index (Hedges et al 1999).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The upper limits along the two climatic gradients, however, represent productive conditions, and species' occurrence limitations could rather be determined by biotic competition. The idea that competition is strongest in favorable environmental conditions as formulated by Grime (1973Grime ( , 1979 received empirical support (e.g., Campbell et al 1992;Brose and Tielbörger 2005;Meier et al 2010) but is generality disputed (e.g., Tilman 1982;Chesson and Huntly 1997;Goldberg et al 1999). Candidate competitors would be C 4 grasses, which replace the danthonioids in more tropical habitats.…”
Section: Opportunistic Evolutionmentioning
confidence: 99%