Abstract
Niche theory predicts that species occurrence and abundance show non-linear, unimodal relationships with respect to environmental gradients. Unimodal models, such as the Gaussian (logistic) model, are however more difficult to fit to data than linear ones, particularly in a multi-species context in ordination, with trait modulated response and when species phylogeny and species traits must be taken into account. Adding squared terms to a linear model is a possibility but gives uninterpretable parameters. This paper explains why and when generalized linear mixed models, even without squared terms, can effectively analyse unimodal data and also presents a graphical tool and statistical test to test for unimodal response while fitting just the generalized linear mixed model. The R-code for this is supplied in Supplemental Information 1. © 2013 Jamil and ter Braak.
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CITATION STYLE
Jamil, T., & ter Braak, C. J. F. (2013). Generalized linear mixed models can detect unimodal species-environment relationships. PeerJ, 2013(1). https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.95
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