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Featured researches published by John P. Haskell.


Ecology | 2003

BODY MASS OF LATE QUATERNARY MAMMALS

Felisa A. Smith; S. Kathleen Lyons; S. K. Morgan Ernest; Kate E. Jones; Dawn M. Kaufman; Tamar Dayan; Pablo A. Marquet; James H. Brown; John P. Haskell

The purpose of this data set was to compile body mass information for all mammals on Earth so that we could investigate the patterns of body mass seen across geographic and taxonomic space and evolutionary time. We were interested in the heritability of body size across taxonomic groups (How conserved is body mass within a genus, family, and order?), in the overall pattern of body mass across continents (Do the moments and other descriptive statistics remain the same across geographic space?), and over evolutionary time (How quickly did body mass patterns iterate on the patterns seen today? Were the Pleistocene extinctions size specific on each continent, and did these events coincide with the arrival of man?). These data are also part of a larger project that seeks to integrate body mass patterns across very diverse taxa (NCEAS Working Group on Body Size in Ecology and Paleoecology: linking pattern and process across space, time, and taxonomic scales). We began with the updated version of D. E. Wilson an...


The American Naturalist | 2003

The Effect of Energy and Seasonality on Avian Species Richness and Community Composition

Allen H. Hurlbert; John P. Haskell

We analyzed geographic patterns of richness in both the breeding and winter season in relation to a remotely sensed index of seasonal production (normalized difference vegetation index [NDVI]) and to measures of habitat heterogeneity at four different spatial resolutions. The relationship between avian richness and NDVI was consistent between seasons, suggesting that the way in which available energy is converted to bird species is similar at these ecologically distinct times of year. The number and proportion of migrant species in breeding communities also increased predictably with the degree of seasonality. The NDVI was a much better predictor of seasonal richness at finer spatial scales, whereas habitat heterogeneity best predicted richness at coarser spatial resolutions. While we find strong support for a positive relationship between available energy and species richness, seasonal NDVI explained at most 61% of the variation in richness. Seasonal NDVI and habitat heterogeneity together explain up to 69% of the variation in richness.


Nature | 2002

Fractal geometry predicts varying body size scaling relationships for mammal and bird home ranges

John P. Haskell; Mark E. Ritchie; Han Olff

Scaling laws that describe complex interactions between organisms and their environment as a function of body size offer exciting potential for synthesis in biology. Home range size, or the area used by individual organisms, is a critical ecological variable that integrates behaviour, physiology and population density and strongly depends on organism size. Here we present a new model of home range–body size scaling based on fractal resource distributions, in which resource encounter rates are a function of body size. The model predicts no universally constant scaling exponent for home range, but defines a possible range of values set by geometric limits to resource density and distribution. The model unifies apparently conflicting earlier results and explains differences in scaling exponents among herbivorous and carnivorous mammals and birds. We apply the model to predict that home range increases with habitat fragmentation, and that the home ranges of larger species should be much more sensitive to habitat fragmentation than those of smaller species.


The American Naturalist | 2004

Similarity of Mammalian Body Size across the Taxonomic Hierarchy and across Space and Time

Felisa A. Smith; James H. Brown; John P. Haskell; S. Kathleen Lyons; John Alroy; Eric L. Charnov; Tamar Dayan; Brian J. Enquist; S. K. Morgan Ernest; Elizabeth A. Hadly; Kate E. Jones; Dawn M. Kaufman; Pablo A. Marquet; Brian A. Maurer; Karl J. Niklas; Warren P. Porter; Bruce H. Tiffney; Michael R. Willig

Although it is commonly assumed that closely related animals are similar in body size, the degree of similarity has not been examined across the taxonomic hierarchy. Moreover, little is known about the variation or consistency of body size patterns across geographic space or evolutionary time. Here, we draw from a data set of terrestrial, nonvolant mammals to quantify and compare patterns across the body size spectrum, the taxonomic hierarchy, continental space, and evolutionary time. We employ a variety of statistical techniques including “sib‐sib” regression, phylogenetic autocorrelation, and nested ANOVA. We find an extremely high resemblance (heritability) of size among congeneric species for mammals over ∼18 g; the result is consistent across the size spectrum. However, there is no significant relationship among the body sizes of congeneric species for mammals under ∼18 g. We suspect that life‐history and ecological parameters are so tightly constrained by allometry at diminutive size that animals can only adapt to novel ecological conditions by modifying body size. The overall distributions of size for each continental fauna and for the most diverse orders are quantitatively similar for North America, South America, and Africa, despite virtually no overlap in species composition. Differences in ordinal composition appear to account for quantitative differences between continents. For most mammalian orders, body size is highly conserved, although there is extensive overlap at all levels of the taxonomic hierarchy. The body size distribution for terrestrial mammals apparently was established early in the Tertiary, and it has remained remarkably constant over the past 50 Ma and across the major continents. Lineages have diversified in size to exploit environmental opportunities but only within limits set by allometric, ecological, and evolutionary constraints.


Nature | 2002

General patterns of taxonomic and biomass partitioning in extant and fossil plant communities

Brian J. Enquist; John P. Haskell; Bruce H. Tiffney

A central goal of evolutionary ecology is to identify the general features maintaining the diversity of species assemblages. Understanding the taxonomic and ecological characteristics of ecological communities provides a means to develop and test theories about the processes that regulate species coexistence and diversity. Here, using data from woody plant communities from different biogeographic regions, continents and geologic time periods, we show that the number of higher taxa is a general power-function of species richness that is significantly different from randomized assemblages. In general, we find that local communities are characterized by fewer higher taxa than would be expected by chance. The degree of taxonomic diversity is influenced by modes of dispersal and potential biotic interactions. Further, changes in local diversity are accompanied by regular changes in the partitioning of community biomass between taxa that are also described by a power function. Our results indicate that local and regional processes have consistently regulated community diversity and biomass partitioning for millions of years.


Reference Module in Life Sciences#R##N#Encyclopedia of Biodiversity (Second Edition) | 2013

Plant Communities, Evolution of

Brian J. Enquist; Bruce H. Tiffney; John P. Haskell; Karl J. Niklas

The patterns and processes within plant communities that underlie the fundamental mechanisms regulating and maintaining biological diversity are reviewed and evaluated. In particular, we focus on general processes or “rules” influencing the evolution of diversity within the framework of ecological communities. We do so by comparing ecological theory with patterns observed in the fossil record and in contemporary communities.


Oecologia | 2001

Regulation of diversity: maintenance of species richness in changing environments

James H. Brown; Jennifer M. Parody; John P. Haskell


Ecology Letters | 2003

Thermodynamic and metabolic effects on the scaling of production and population energy use

S. K. Morgan Ernest; James H. Brown; James F. Gillooly; Ethan P. White; Felisa A. Smith; John P. Haskell; S. Kathleen Lyons; Karl J. Niklas; Bruce H. Tiffney; Santa Fe


Evolutionary Ecology Research | 2001

Density-dependent invariance, dimensionless life histories, and the energy-equivalence rule

Eric L. Charnov; John P. Haskell; S.K.M. Ernest


Evolutionary Ecology Research | 2004

Similarities in body size distributions of small-bodied flying vertebrates

Brian A. Maurer; James H. Brown; Tamar Dayan; Brian J. Enquist; Elizabeth A. Hadly; John P. Haskell; David Jablonski; Kate E. Jones; Dawn M. Kaufman; S. Kathleen Lyons; Karl J. Niklas; Warren P. Porter; Kaustuv Roy; Felisa A. Smith; Bruce H. Tiffney; Michael R. Willig

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James H. Brown

University of New Mexico

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S. Kathleen Lyons

National Museum of Natural History

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Kate E. Jones

University College London

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