Aderhold A, Husmeier D, Lennon, J.J., Beale, C.M., Smith, V.A. (2012). Hierarchical Bayesian models in ecology: Reconstructing species interaction networks from non-homogeneous species abundance data. Ecological Informatics.
Beale C.M., Lennon J.J. (2012). Incorporating uncertainty in predictive species distribution modelling. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 367(1586): 247-258.
Lennon J.J., Beale C.M., Reid C.L., Kent M., Pakeman R.J. (2011). Are richness patterns of common and rare species equally well explained by environmental variables? Ecography, 34(4): 529-539.
Beale, C.M. and Lennon, J.J. (in press). Incorporating uncertainty in predictive species distribution modelling. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B series.
Pakeman, R.J, Lennon, J.J. and Brooker, R.W. (2011). Trait assembly in plant assemblages and its modulation by productivity and disturbance. Oecologia, 167: 209-218.
Beale, C. M., Lennon, J.J., Yearsley, J.M., Brewer, M.J. and Elston, D.A. (2010). Regression analysis of spatial data. Ecology Letters, 13(2): 246-264.
Pickles, B.J., Genney, D.R., Potts, J.M., Lennon, J.J., Anderson, I.C. and Alexander, I.J. (2010). Spatial and temporal ecology of Scots pine ectomycorrhizas. New Phytologist, 186(3): 755-768.
Beale, C.M., Lennon, J.J. and Gimona, A. (2009). European bird distributions still show few climate associations. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(16): E41-E43.
Beale, C.M., Lennon, J.J. and Gimona, A. (2008). Opening the climate envelope reveals no macroscale associations with climate in European birds. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 105(39): 14908-14912.
Pakeman, R.J., Reid, C.L., Lennon, J.J. and Kent, M. (2008). Possible interactions between environmental factors in determining species optima. Journal of Vegetation Science, 19(2): 201-208.
Prosser, J.I., Bohannan, B.J.M., Curtis, T.P., Ellis, R.J., Firestone, M.K., Freckleton, R. P., Green, J.L., Green, L. E., Killham, K., Lennon, J.J., Osborn, A.M., Solan, M., van der Gast, C.J. and Young, J.P.W. (2007). Essay - The role of ecological theory in microbial ecology. Nature Reviews Microbiology, 5(5): 384-392.
Gaston, K.J., Davies, R.G., Orme, C.D.L., Olson, V.A., Thomas, G.H., Ding, T.S., Rasmussen, P.C., Lennon, J.J., Bennett, P.M., Owens, I.P.F. and Blackburn, T.M. (2007). Spatial turnover in the global avifauna. Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 274(1618): 1567-1574.
Soininen, J., Lennon, J.J. and Hillebrand, H. (2007). A multivariate analysis of beta diversity across organisms and environments. Ecology, 88(11): 2830-2838.
Beale, C.M., Lennon, J.J., Elston, D.A., Brewer, M.J. and Yearsley, J.M. (2007). Red herrings remain in geographical ecology: a reply to Hawkins et al. Ecography, 30(6): 845-847.
Evans, K.L., J.J. Lennon & K.J. Gaston (2007). Slopes of avian species-area relationships, human population density, and environmental factors. Avian Conservation and Ecology, 2(2): 7.
Drakare, S., Lennon, J.J. and Hillebrand, H. (2006). The imprint of the geographical, evolutionary and ecological context on species-area relationships. Ecology Letters, 9(2): 215-227.
Pakeman, R.J., Beaton, J.K., Thoss, V., Lennon, J.J., Campbell, C.D., White, D. and Iason, G.R. (2006). The extended phenotype of Scots pine Pinus sylvestris structures the understorey assemblage. Ecography, 29(3): 451-457.
Iason, G.R., Lennon, J.J., Pakeman, R.J., Thoss, V., Beaton, J.K., Sim, D.A. and Elston, D.A. (2005). Does chemical composition of individual Scots pine trees determine the biodiversity of their associated ground vegetation? Ecology Letters, 8(4): 364-369.
Halley, J.M., Hartley, S., Kallimanis, A.S., Kunin, W E., Lennon, J.J. and Sgardelis, S.P. (2004). Uses and abuses of fractal methodology in ecology. Ecology Letters, 7(3): 254-271.
Lennon, J.J., Koleff, P., Greenwood, J.J D. and Gaston, K.J. (2004). Contribution of rarity and commonness to patterns of species richness. Ecology Letters, 7(2): 81-87.
Hartley, S., Kunin, W.E., Lennon, J.J. and Pocock, M J.O. (2004). Coherence and discontinuity in the scaling of species distribution patterns. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B-Biological Sciences, 271(1534): 81-88.
Corne, S.A., Carver, S.J., Kunin, W.E., Lennon, J.J. and van Hees, W.W.S. (2004). Predicting forest attributes In southeast Alaska using artificial neural networks. Forest Science, 50(2): 259-276.
Koleff, P., Gaston, K.J. and Lennon, J.J. (2003). Measuring beta diversity for presence-absence data. Journal of Animal Ecology, 72(3): 367-382.
Koleff, P., Lennon, J.J. and Gaston, K.J. (2003). Are there latitudinal gradients in species turnover? Global Ecology and Biogeography, 12(6): 483-498.
Leon-Cortes, J.L., Lennon, J.J. and Thomas, C.D. (2003). Ecological dynamics of extinct species in empty habitat networks. 1. The role of habitat pattern and quantity, stochasticity and dispersal. Oikos, 102(3): 449-464.
Leon-Cortes, J.L., Lennon, J.J. and Thomas, C. D. (2003). Ecological dynamics of extinct species in empty habitat networks. 2. The role of host plant dynamics. Oikos, 102(3): 465-477.
Lennon, J.J., Kunin, W.E. and Hartley, S. (2002). Fractal species distributions do not produce power-law species-area relationships. Oikos, 97(3): 378-386.
Lennon, J.J., Kunin, W.E., Corne, S., Carver, S. and Van Hees, W.W.S. (2002). Are Alaskan trees found in locally more favourable sites in marginal areas? Global Ecology and Biogeography, 11(2): 103-114.
Lennon, J.J., Koleff, P., Greenwood, J.J.D. and Gaston, K.J. (2001). The geographical structure of British bird distributions: diversity, spatial turnover and scale. Journal of Animal Ecology, 70(6): 966-979.
Lennon, J.J. (2000). Red-shifts and red herrings in geographical ecology. Ecography, 23(1): 101-113.
Lennon, J.J., Greenwood, J.J.D. and Turner, J.R.G. (2000). Bird diversity and environmental gradients in Britain: a test of the species-energy hypothesis. Journal of Animal Ecology, 69(4): 581-598.
Kunin, W.E., Hartley, S. and Lennon, J.J. (2000). Scaling down: On the challenge of estimating abundance from occurrence patterns. American Naturalist, 156(5): 560-566.
Thomas, C.D. and Lennon, J.J. (1999). Birds extend their ranges northwards. Nature, 399(6733): 213-213.
Hay, S.I. and Lennon, J.J. (1999). Deriving meteorological variables across Africa for the study and control of vector-borne disease: a comparison of remote sensing and spatial interpolation of climate. Tropical Medicine & International Health, 4(1): 58-71.
Hodkinson, I.D., Bird, J., Miles, J.E., Bale, J.S. and Lennon, J.J. (1999). Climatic signals in the life histories of insects: the distribution and abundance of heather psyllids (Strophingia spp.) in the UK. Functional Ecology, 13: 83-95.
Lennon, J.J. (1999). Resource selection functions: taking space seriously? Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 14(10): 399-400.
Griffiths, H.I., Pietrzeniuk, E., Fuhrmann, R., Lennon, J.J., Martens, K. and Evans, J.G. (1998). Tonnacypris glacialis (Ostracoda, Cyprididae): taxonomic position, (palaeo).ecology, and zoogeography. Journal of Biogeography, 25(3): 515-526.
Lennon, J.J., Turner, J.R.G. and Connell, D. (1997). A metapopulation model of species boundaries. Oikos, 78(3): 486-502.
Shorrocks, B., Dytham, C. and Lennon, J. (1997). A graphical method for analysing the dynamics of three-species systems. Oecologia, 111(4): 529-534.
Lennon, J.J. and Turner, J.R.G. (1995). Predicting the spatial-distribution of climate - temperature in Great Britain. Journal of Animal Ecology, 64(3): 370-392.
Turner, J.R.G. and Lennon, J.J. (1989). Species richness and the energy theory - reply. Nature, 340(6232): 351-351.
Turner, J.R.G., Lennon, J.J. and Lawrenson, J.A. (1988). British bird species distributions and the energy theory. Nature, 335(6190): 539-541.
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