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inst/REFERENCES.bib
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inst/REFERENCES.bib
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%% This BibTeX bibliography file was created using BibDesk.
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%% http://bibdesk.sourceforge.net/
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%% Created for Eric Coissac at 2018-10-18 14:52:51 +0200
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%% Saved with string encoding Unicode (UTF-8)
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@article{Tsallis:94:00,
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Author = {Tsallis, Constantino},
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Date-Added = {2018-10-18 14:52:41 +0200},
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Date-Modified = {2018-10-18 14:52:49 +0200},
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Journal = {Quim. Nova},
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Number = 6,
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Pages = {468--471},
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Title = {What are the numbers that experiments provide},
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Volume = 17,
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Year = 1994}
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@ARTICLE{Whittaker:10:00,
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title = "Meta-analyses and mega-mistakes: calling time on meta-analysis
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of the species richness-productivity relationship",
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author = "Whittaker, Robert J",
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abstract = "The form of the species richness-productivity relationship
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(SRPR) is both theoretically important and contentious. In an
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effort to distill general patterns, ecologists have undertaken
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meta-analyses, within which each SRPR data set is first
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classified into one of five alternative forms: positive, humped
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(unimodal), negative, U-shaped (unimodal), and no relationship.
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Herein, I first provide a critique of this approach, based on 68
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plant data sets/ studies used in three meta-analyses published
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in Ecology. The meta-analyses are shown to have resulted in
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highly divergent outcomes, inconsistent and often highly
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inappropriate classification of data sets, and the introduction
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and multiplication of errors from one meta-analysis to the next.
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I therefore call on the ecological community at large to adopt a
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far more rigorous and critical attitude to the use of
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meta-analysis. Second, I develop the argument that the
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literature on the SRPR continues to be bedeviled by a common
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failing to appreciate the fundamental importance of the scale of
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analysis, beginning with the confusion evident between concepts
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of grain, focus, and extent. I postulate that variation in the
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form of the SRPR at fine scales of analysis owes much to
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artifacts of the sampling regime adopted. An improved
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understanding may emerge from combining sampling theory with an
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understanding of the factors controlling the form of species
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abundance distributions and species accumulation curves.",
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journal = "Ecology",
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publisher = "Eco Soc America",
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volume = 91,
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number = 9,
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pages = "2522--2533",
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month = sep,
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year = 2010
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}
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