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Ingolf Kühn

Researcher at Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

Publications -  232
Citations -  31838

Ingolf Kühn is an academic researcher from Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Biodiversity. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 222 publications receiving 25573 citations. Previous affiliations of Ingolf Kühn include Luther University & Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul.

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Methods to account for spatial autocorrelation in the analysis of species distributional data : a review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe six different statistical approaches to infer correlates of species distributions, for both presence/absence (binary response) and species abundance data (poisson or normally distributed response), while accounting for spatial autocorrelation in model residuals: autocovariate regression; spatial eigenvector mapping; generalised least squares; (conditional and simultaneous) autoregressive models and generalised estimating equations.
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TRY - a global database of plant traits

Jens Kattge, +136 more
TL;DR: TRY as discussed by the authors is a global database of plant traits, including morphological, anatomical, physiological, biochemical and phenological characteristics of plants and their organs, which can be used for a wide range of research from evolutionary biology, community and functional ecology to biogeography.
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The LEDA Traitbase: A database of life-history traits of the Northwest European flora

TL;DR: The LEDA Traitbase is useful for large-scale analyses of functional responses of communities to environmental change, effects of community trait composition on ecosystem properties and patterns of rarity and invasiveness, as well as linkages between traits as expressions of fundamental trade-offs in plants.
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No saturation in the accumulation of alien species worldwide.

Hanno Seebens, +53 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a database of 45,813 first records of 16,926 established alien species and showed that the annual rate of first records worldwide has increased during the last 200 years, with 37% of all first records reported most recently (1970-2014).