Kevin S. McCann and Gabriel Gellner
1. Gabriel Gellner, Kevin S. McCann & Emily J. Champagne: Introduction
2. Peter Chesson: Species coexistence
3. Gabriel Gellner, Kevin S. McCann & Christopher Greyson-Gaito: The synergistic effects of interaction strength and lags on ecological stability
4. Karen C. Abbott:
Non-equilibrium dynamics and stochastic processes
5. André M. de Roos: The impact of population structure on population and community dynamics
6. Stefano Allesina & Jacopo Grilli: Models for large ecological communities - a random matrix approach
7. Jordi Bascompte & Antonio Ferrera: A
structural theory of mutualistic networks
8. Michio Kondoh, Kazutaka Kawatsu, Yutaka Osada & Masayuki Ushio: A data driven approach to complex ecological systems
9. Ulrich Brose: Trait-based models of complex ecological networks
10. Sonia Kéfi: Ecological networks: from structure to
dynamics
11. Christopher A. Klausmeier, Colin T. Kremer & Thomas Koffel: Trait-based ecological and eco-evolutionary theory
12. Dominique Gravel & François Massol: Toward a general theory of metacommunity ecology
13. T. Alex Perkins & Jason R. Rohr: Theories of diversity in disease
ecology
14. David A. Vasseur: Climate change: Studying the effects of temperature on population and community dynamics
15. John M. Drake, Suzanne M. O'Regan, Vasilis Dakos, Sonia Kéfi & Pejman Rohani: Alternative stable states, tipping points, and early warning signals of ecological
transitions
16. Kevin S. McCann & Gabriel Gellner: Areas of current and future growth
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Kevin McCann joined the faculty at the University of Guelph in 2003 as a Canadian Research Chair in Biodiversity after starting his career at McGill University in 1999. McCann is a leading theoretical ecologist with an expertise in food webs. McCann combines theoretical ecology with
experimental and empirical work across aquatic ecosystems (lakes, rivers and coastal marine ecosystems). His research seeks to examine the biological structure underlying diversity and the critical relationship between this structure, ecosystem function and stability. In 2013, McCann was elected
lifetime fellow to the Ecological Society of America for research achievements.
Gabriel Gellner is a researcher at the University of Guelph, having completed his PhD in 2014. Gellner is a theoretical ecologist with wide ranging interests in food webs, mathematical and computational
methods, and disease ecology. Gellner has worked with leading scientists in North America (University of Guelph, UC Davis, Colorado State, USDA) and internationally (Japan, Brazil, UK). His work looks at how complex networks can be decomposed into fundamental dynamic subsystems from a conceptual and
methodological perspective.
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