Follow
Adam C Algar
Adam C Algar
Associate Professor, Department of Biology, Lakehead University
Verified email at lakeheadu.ca
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
The evolution of critical thermal limits of life on Earth
JM Bennett, J Sunday, P Calosi, F Villalobos, B Martínez, ...
Nature communications 12 (1), 1198, 2021
2612021
Evolutionary stasis and lability in thermal physiology in a group of tropical lizards
MM Munoz, MA Stimola, AC Algar, A Conover, AJ Rodriguez, ...
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 281 (1778), 20132433, 2014
2312014
GlobTherm, a global database on thermal tolerances for aquatic and terrestrial organisms
JM Bennett, P Calosi, S Clusella-Trullas, B Martínez, J Sunday, AC Algar, ...
Scientific Data 5 (1), 1-7, 2018
2172018
Predicting the future of species diversity: macroecological theory, climate change, and direct tests of alternative forecasting methods
AC Algar, HM Kharouba, ER Young, JT Kerr
Ecography 32 (1), 22-33, 2009
2162009
Historically calibrated predictions of butterfly species' range shift using global change as a pseudo-experiment
HM Kharouba, AC Algar, JT Kerr
Ecology 90 (8), 2213-2222, 2009
1702009
A test of metabolic theory as the mechanism underlying broad‐scale species‐richness gradients
AC Algar, JT Kerr, DJ Currie
Global Ecology and Biogeography 16 (2), 170-178, 2007
1062007
The dimensionality and structure of species trait spaces
D Mouillot, N Loiseau, M Grenié, AC Algar, M Allegra, MW Cadotte, ...
Ecology Letters 24 (9), 1988-2009, 2021
1042021
Evolutionary constraints on regional faunas: whom, but not how many
AC Algar, JT Kerr, DJ Currie
Ecology Letters 12 (1), 57-65, 2008
992008
Quantifying the importance of regional and local filters for community trait structure in tropical and temperate zones
AC Algar, JT Kerr, DJ Currie
Ecology 92 (4), 903-914, 2011
762011
Hurricane effects on Neotropical lizards span geographic and phylogenetic scales
CM Donihue, AM Kowaleski, JB Losos, AC Algar, S Baeckens, ...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 (19), 10429-10434, 2020
652020
The island–mainland species turnover relationship
YE Stuart, JB Losos, AC Algar
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 279 (1744), 4071-4077, 2012
612012
Niche incumbency, dispersal limitation and climate shape geographical distributions in a species‐rich island adaptive radiation
AC Algar, DL Mahler, RE Glor, JB Losos
Global Ecology and Biogeography, 2012
602012
High rates of forest loss and turnover obscured by classical landscape measures
A Altamirano, P Aplin, A Miranda, L Cayuela, AC Algar, R Field
Applied Geography 40, 199-211, 2013
592013
Climatic niche attributes and diversification in Anolis lizards
JA Velasco, E Martínez‐Meyer, O Flores‐Villela, A García, AC Algar, ...
Journal of Biogeography 43 (1), 134-144, 2016
512016
Untangling Intra- and Interspecific Effects on Body Size Clines Reveals Divergent Processes Structuring Convergent Patterns in Anolis Lizards
MM Muñoz, JE Wegener, AC Algar
The American Naturalist 184 (5), 636-646, 2014
442014
Saxitoxin and tetrodotoxin bioavailability increases in future oceans
CC Roggatz, N Fletcher, DM Benoit, AC Algar, A Doroff, B Wright, ...
Nature Climate Change 9 (11), 840-844, 2019
432019
Evolutionary assembly of island faunas reverses the classic island–mainland richness difference in Anolis lizards
AC Algar, JB Losos
Journal of Biogeography 38 (6), 1125-1137, 2011
362011
Papua New Guinea terrestrial‐vertebrate richness: Elevation matters most for all except reptiles
O Tallowin, A Allison, AC Algar, F Kraus, S Meiri
Journal of Biogeography 44 (8), 1734-1744, 2017
352017
Area, climate heterogeneity, and the response of climate niches to ecological opportunity in island radiations of Anolis lizards
AC Algar, DL Mahler
Global Ecology and Biogeography 25 (7), 781-791, 2016
332016
Reconciling topographic and climatic effects on widespread and range‐restricted species richness
ND Szabo, AC Algar, JT Kerr
Global Ecology and Biogeography 18 (6), 735-744, 2009
322009
The system can't perform the operation now. Try again later.
Articles 1–20