Analysing ecological dynamics with relational event models: the case of biological invasions
R\=uta Juozaitien\.e, Hanno Seebens, Guillaume Latombe, Franz Essl,, Ernst C. Wit

TL;DR
This paper introduces relational event modeling (REM) as a novel method to analyze large-scale spatio-temporal ecological data, specifically applied to understanding the global spread of invasive alien species over more than a century.
Contribution
The paper presents REM as a new approach for analyzing dynamic ecological processes, capturing temporal sequences and interactions in species invasions at large spatial scales.
Findings
Identified key drivers of invasive species spread, including trade, land use, and climate.
Discovered species-interconnectedness influencing invasion dynamics.
Demonstrated REM's effectiveness in unraveling complex ecological interactions.
Abstract
Aim: Spatio-temporal processes play a key role in ecology, from genes to large-scale macroecological and biogeographical processes. Existing methods studying such spatio-temporally structured data either simplify the dynamic structure or the complex interactions of ecological drivers. This paper aims to present a generic method for ecological research that allows analysing spatio-temporal patterns of biological processes at large spatial scales by including the time-varying variables that drive these dynamics. Methods: We introduce a method called relational event modelling (REM), which relies on temporal interaction dynamics, that encode sequences of relational events connecting a sender node to a recipient node at a specific point in time. We apply REM to the spread of alien species around the globe between 1880 and 2005, following accidental or deliberate introductions into…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpecies Distribution and Climate Change · Forest Insect Ecology and Management · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
