2022
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.13412
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Quantifying phenological diversity: a framework based on Hill numbers theory

Abstract: Background Despite the great concern triggered by the environmental crisis worldwide, the loss of temporal key functions and processes involved in biodiversity maintenance has received little attention. Species are restricted in their life cycles by environmental variables because of their physiological and behavioral properties; thus, the timing and duration of species’ presence and their activities vary greatly between species within a community. Despite the ecological relevance of such variat… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…While biodiversity is inherently a hierarchical concept encompassing different levels (genes, populations, species, ecological communities and ecosystems), there has been a lack of a clear definition of diversity at the individual level. Hill numbers, proposed by Hill (1973) based on Rényi's (1961) entropy, have received widespread attention in recent years (Byrnes et al, 2022; Chao et al, 2014; Chiu et al, 2014; Ma et al, 2019; Ma & Li, 2018; Sanchez‐Ochoa et al, 2022). Building on Hill numbers, Gaggiotti et al (2018) have developed a unified framework to measure biodiversity from the genetic and ecosystem levels.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While biodiversity is inherently a hierarchical concept encompassing different levels (genes, populations, species, ecological communities and ecosystems), there has been a lack of a clear definition of diversity at the individual level. Hill numbers, proposed by Hill (1973) based on Rényi's (1961) entropy, have received widespread attention in recent years (Byrnes et al, 2022; Chao et al, 2014; Chiu et al, 2014; Ma et al, 2019; Ma & Li, 2018; Sanchez‐Ochoa et al, 2022). Building on Hill numbers, Gaggiotti et al (2018) have developed a unified framework to measure biodiversity from the genetic and ecosystem levels.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We followed Sánchez‐Ochoa et al . (2022), who proposed a Hill numbers‐based phenological diversity metric (Table S1), which quantifies the degree of overlap in phenology curves between pairs of individuals or species within a community, as a measure of phenological diversity. Building upon the principles of these metrics, it is possible to first adopt a Hill numbers‐like approach to compare any pair of pixels within a spatial grid (e.g.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Los números de Hill son medidas estadísticas que se han implementado ampliamente en los campos de la ecología, la biología y la conservación para estimar y comparar la composición de especies en diferentes comunidades o hábitats [10]- [12]. Su implementación proporciona información relevante para el diseño, planificación y gestión de proyectos y sistemas que abordan problemas ambientales en un área determinada [13].…”
Section: Introductionunclassified