Spatial evolutionary ecology
- Data Manager:
- rafael_wueest-wsl_ch
We evaluate the ecological and macro-evolutionary mechanisms, acting across different spatial scales, that influence biological diversity. Our research spans community level questions focused on the local maintenance of diversity to biogeographic research evaluating the origin and movement of species across broad biogeographic regions. Our research requires integration from a range of fields, including: ecology, evolutionary biology, biogeography, climatology and geology because mechanisms that influence biological diversity are played out across spatial and temporal scales. We use a range of statistical and modeling approaches to combine the diverse data types in a spatial context. One current focus of the group is on the role of plant-hummingbird interactions in the generation and maintenance high tropical diversity where we work across elevational gradients and distinct biogeographic regions in Central and South America. More generally, we ask why montane regions have such high biological diversity and currently are exploring this question with plants in the Alps. Finally, we use global data on tetrapods to evaluate mechanisms influencing very broad scale patterns of diversity.
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Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape (WSL)
- Biodiversity and Conservation Biology
- Community Ecology
- Research Unit Forest Resources and Management (FoReMa)
- Forest Dynamics
- Forest Soils and Biogeochemistry
- Forest health and biotic interactions
- Mountain Hydrology and Mass Movements (GebirgsHydrologie)
- Land Change Science
- WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research (SLF)
- National data and information center for the fungi of Switzerland (SwissFungi)
- SwissLichens
- WSL Publications (Web & Print)