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Creators/Authors contains: "Dallas, Tad_A"

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  1. Abstract The availability of suitable niche space constrains where species can occur geographically. This tie between niche space and geographic space is crucial when estimating species geographic distributions in a changing climate. However, specific combinations of climatic conditions may be overrepresented in geographic space, highlighting the potential disconnect between climatic niche area and geographic range size.We develop a niche density estimator that accounts for the geographic availability of climatic niche space, relate this to traditional estimates of niche area and explore how these niche estimates are related to species geographic range size.To do this, we use data on over 230,000 species recorded in the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, providing a thorough test of the sensitivity of niche estimation technique on geographic range size–climatic niche scaling relationships, and clarifying the link between geographic space and environmental space by considering the density of available environments in environmental space.Niche density was more strongly related to species geographic range size than niche area, highlighting the role of the geographic availability of climatic niche space in biogeographic relationships. As species geographic ranges and environmental conditions change, understanding the ecological and evolutionary determinants of this positive scaling between geographic range size and niche size is an important research frontier. 
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