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Robert D. Holt

Researcher at University of Florida

Publications -  358
Citations -  58779

Robert D. Holt is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Biological dispersal. The author has an hindex of 102, co-authored 346 publications receiving 52871 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert D. Holt include Harvard University & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Trophic cascades across ecosystems

TL;DR: It is shown that fish indirectly facilitate terrestrial plant reproduction through cascading trophic interactions across ecosystem boundaries, confirming that strong species interactions can reverberate across ecosystems, and emphasizing the importance of landscape-level processes in driving local species interactions.
Journal Article

On the evolutionary ecology of species' ranges

TL;DR: It is suggested that a rich range of evolutionary patterns in species’ ranges may occur, including expansions or contractions, leading to dynamism in ranges even in epochs without strong directional environmental change.

PERSPECTIVES Meta-ecosystems: a theoretical framework for a spatial ecosystem ecology

TL;DR: The meta-ecosystem concept as discussed by the authors is defined as a set of ecosystems connected by spatial flows of energy, materials and organisms across ecosystem boundaries, which is a natural extension of the metapopulation and metacommunity concepts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meta‐ecosystems: a theoretical framework for a spatial ecosystem ecology

TL;DR: The meta-ecosystem concept as mentioned in this paper is defined as a set of ecosystems connected by spatial flows of energy, materials and organisms across ecosystem boundaries, which is a natural extension of the metapopulation and metacommunity concepts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Allee effects, invasion pinning, and species' borders.

TL;DR: The properties of invasion models when a species cannot persist below a critical population density known as an “Allee threshold” are studied, suggesting caution when interpreting abrupt range limits as stemming either from competition between species or a hard environmental limit that cannot be crossed.