ABSTRACT

Ecological dynamics are tremendously complicated and are studied at a variety of spatial and temporal scales. Ecologists often simplify analysis by describing changes in density of individuals across a landscape, and statistical methods are advancing rapidly for studying spatio-temporal dynamics. However, spatio-temporal statistics is often presented using a set of principles that may seem very distant from ecological theory or practice. This book seeks to introduce a minimal set of principles and numerical techniques for spatio-temporal statistics that can be used to implement a wide range of real-world ecological analyses regarding animal movement, population dynamics, community composition, causal attribution, and spatial dynamics. We provide a step-by-step illustration of techniques that combine core spatial-analysis packages in R with low-level computation using Template Model Builder. Techniques are showcased using real-world data from varied ecological systems, providing a toolset for hierarchical modelling of spatio-temporal processes. Spatio-Temporal Models for Ecologists is meant for graduate level students, alongside applied and academic ecologists.

Key Features:

  • Foundational ecological principles and analyses
  • Thoughtful and thorough ecological examples
  • Analyses conducted using a minimal toolbox and fast computation
  • Code using R and TMB included in the book and available online

part I|50 pages

Introductory

part II|106 pages

Basic

chapter 3|18 pages

Population Dynamics and State-space Models

chapter 4|20 pages

Individual Movement

chapter 5|23 pages

Spatial Models

chapter 6|22 pages

Spatial Sampling Designs and Analysis

part III|85 pages

Advanced