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      Changes in Assemblages and Diversity Patterns of Carabidae (Coleoptera) from 1997 to 2014 in a Desalinized, Intensively Cultivated Agricultural Landscape in Northern China

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          iNEXT: an R package for rarefaction and extrapolation of species diversity (Hill numbers)

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            Ecologically meaningful transformations for ordination of species data

            This paper examines how to obtain species biplots in unconstrained or constrained ordination without resorting to the Euclidean distance [used in principal-component analysis (PCA) and redundancy analysis (RDA)] or the chi-square distance [preserved in correspondence analysis (CA) and canonical correspondence analysis (CCA)] which are not always appropriate for the analysis of community composition data. To achieve this goal, transformations are proposed for species data tables. They allow ecologists to use ordination methods such as PCA and RDA, which are Euclidean-based, for the analysis of community data, while circumventing the problems associated with the Euclidean distance, and avoiding CA and CCA which present problems of their own in some cases. This allows the use of the original (transformed) species data in RDA carried out to test for relationships with explanatory variables (i.e. environmental variables, or factors of a multifactorial analysis-of-variance model); ecologists can then draw biplots displaying the relationships of the species to the explanatory variables. Another application allows the use of species data in other methods of multivariate data analysis which optimize a least-squares loss function; an example is K-means partitioning.
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              Ecological intensification: harnessing ecosystem services for food security.

              Rising demands for agricultural products will increase pressure to further intensify crop production, while negative environmental impacts have to be minimized. Ecological intensification entails the environmentally friendly replacement of anthropogenic inputs and/or enhancement of crop productivity, by including regulating and supporting ecosystem services management in agricultural practices. Effective ecological intensification requires an understanding of the relations between land use at different scales and the community composition of ecosystem service-providing organisms above and below ground, and the flow, stability, contribution to yield, and management costs of the multiple services delivered by these organisms. Research efforts and investments are particularly needed to reduce existing yield gaps by integrating context-appropriate bundles of ecosystem services into crop production systems. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Coleopterists Bulletin
                The Coleopterists Bulletin
                Coleopterists Society
                0010-065X
                September 1 2018
                September 20 2018
                : 72
                : 3
                : 597
                Affiliations
                [1 ]College of Agricultural Resources and Environmental Sciences China Agricultural University, Beijing 100094, CHINA College of Architecture and Art, Hebei University of Architecture Zhangjiakou 075000, CHINA
                [2 ]College of Agricultural Resources and Environmental Sciences China Agricultural University, Beijing 100094, CHINA Liuyh@cau.edu.cn
                [3 ]UCL Department of Geography, University College London London, UK
                Article
                10.1649/0010-065X-72.3.597
                3517143c-ca19-4604-af94-8f0e7f77e9e3
                © 2018

                http://www.bioone.org/page/resources/researchers/rights_and_permissions

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