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Reinforcing loose foundation stones in trait-based plant ecology
by
Shipley, Bill
, Laughlin, Daniel C.
, Laliberté, Etienne
, De Bello, Francesco
, Reich, Peter B.
, Cornelissen, J. Hans C.
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Ecology
/ Environment
/ Environmental gradient
/ Hydrology/Water Resources
/ intraspecific variation
/ Life Sciences
/ Phenotype
/ Plant ecology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plants
/ prediction
/ SPECIAL TOPIC ON FUNCTIONAL TRAITS
/ Species Specificity
/ taxonomy
2016
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Reinforcing loose foundation stones in trait-based plant ecology
by
Shipley, Bill
, Laughlin, Daniel C.
, Laliberté, Etienne
, De Bello, Francesco
, Reich, Peter B.
, Cornelissen, J. Hans C.
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Ecology
/ Environment
/ Environmental gradient
/ Hydrology/Water Resources
/ intraspecific variation
/ Life Sciences
/ Phenotype
/ Plant ecology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plants
/ prediction
/ SPECIAL TOPIC ON FUNCTIONAL TRAITS
/ Species Specificity
/ taxonomy
2016
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Do you wish to request the book?
Reinforcing loose foundation stones in trait-based plant ecology
by
Shipley, Bill
, Laughlin, Daniel C.
, Laliberté, Etienne
, De Bello, Francesco
, Reich, Peter B.
, Cornelissen, J. Hans C.
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Ecology
/ Environment
/ Environmental gradient
/ Hydrology/Water Resources
/ intraspecific variation
/ Life Sciences
/ Phenotype
/ Plant ecology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Plants
/ prediction
/ SPECIAL TOPIC ON FUNCTIONAL TRAITS
/ Species Specificity
/ taxonomy
2016
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Reinforcing loose foundation stones in trait-based plant ecology
Journal Article
Reinforcing loose foundation stones in trait-based plant ecology
2016
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Overview
The promise of “trait-based” plant ecology is one of generalized prediction across organizational and spatial scales, independent of taxonomy. This promise is a major reason for the increased popularity of this approach. Here, we argue that some important foundational assumptions of trait-based ecology have not received sufficient empirical evaluation. We identify three such assumptions and, where possible, suggest methods of improvement: (i) traits are functional to the degree that they determine individual fitness, (ii) intraspecific variation in functional traits can be largely ignored, and (iii) functional traits show general predictive relationships to measurable environmental gradients.
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg,Springer Science + Business Media,Springer,Springer Nature B.V
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