David Storch - Selected Publications#


Rineau V., Smyčka J. & Storch D. (2022). Diversity-dependence is a ubiquitous phenomenon across Phanerozoic oceans. Science Advances 8: eadd9620. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.add9620. IF: 14.957

Storch D., Šímová I., Smyčka J., Bohdalková E., Toszogyova A. & Okie J.G. (2022). Biodiversity dynamics in the Anthropocene: How human activities change equilibria of species richness. Ecography 44: e05778. Doi: 10.1111/ecog.05778. IF: 6.802
[11 citations according to Google Scholar]

Hatton I.A., Dobson A.P., Storch D., Galbraith E.D. & Loreau M. (2019). Linking scaling laws across eukaryotes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A. 116: 21616-21622. IF: 12.779
[79 citations according to Google Scholar]

Storch D. & Okie J. (2019). Carrying capacity for species richness. Global Ecology and Biogeography 28: 1519-1532. IF: 6.909
[35 citations according to Google Scholar]

Etienne R.S., Cabral J.S., Hagen O., Hartig F., Hurlbert A.H., Pellisier L., Pontarp M. & Storch D. (2019). A minimal model for the latitudinal diversity gradient suggests a dominant role for ecological limits. American Naturalist 194: E122-E123. IF: 4.367
[33 citations according to Google Scholar]

Storch D., Bohdalková E. & Okie J. (2018). The more-individuals hypothesis revisited: the role of community abundance in species richness regulation and the productivity-diversity relationship. Ecology Letters 21: 920-937. IF: 11.274
[155 citations according to Google Scholar]

Graham C.H., Storch D. & Macháč A. (2018). Phylogenetic scale in ecology and evolution. Global Ecology and Biogeography 27: 175-187. IF: 6.909
[135 citations according to Google Scholar]

Šímová I. & Storch D. (2017). The enigma of terrestrial primary productivity: measurements, models, scales and the diversity-productivity relationship. Ecography 40: 239-252. IF: 6.802
[Winner of the E4 Ecography award for a best review paper, 62 citations according to Google Scholar]

Keil P., Storch D., Jetz W. (2015). On the decline of biodiversity due to area loss. Nature Communications 6: 8837. DOI:10.1038/ncomms9837. IF: 17.694
[69 citations according to Google Scholar]

Storch D., Keil P. & Jetz W. (2012). Universal species-area and endemics-area relationships at continental scales. Nature 488: 78-81. IF: 69.504
[172 citations according to Google Scholar]

(All citation numbers for 22 December 2022, IFs are from the 2022 release)

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