Ocean currents, prevailing winds, and the hierarchical structures of river networks are known to create asymmetries in re-colonization between habitat patches. The impacts of such asymmetries on metapopulation persistence are seldom considered, especially rarely in theoretical studies. Considering three classical models (the island, the stepping stone and the distance-dependent model), we explore how metapopulation persistence is affected by (i) asymmetry in dispersal strength, in which the colonization rate between two patches differs in direction, and (ii) asymmetry in connectivity, in which the overall colonization pattern displays asymmetry (circulating or dendritic networks). Viability can be drastically reduced when directional bias i...
The connectivity of marine populations is often surprisingly lower than predicted by the dispersal c...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Climate change is rearranging the limits of geographic distributions of species. The populations inh...
Ocean currents, prevailing winds, and the hierarchical structures of river networks are known to cre...
Despite the considerable evidence showing that dispersal between habitat patches is often asymmetric...
A spatial metapopulation is a mosaic of interconnected patch populations. The complex routes of colo...
Almost all metapopulation modelling assumes that connectivity between patches is only a function of ...
Eco-evolutionary dynamics are now recognized to be highly relevant for population and community dyna...
1. Understanding the consequences of spatial structure on ecological dynamics is a central theme in ...
Metapopulations consist of a number of sub-populations connectedthrough the dispersal of migrants. I...
1. Understanding the consequences of spatial structure on ecological dynamics is a central theme in ...
Synthesising the relationships between complexity, connectivity, and the stability of large biologic...
1. Despite years of attention, the dynamics of species constrained to disperse within riverine netwo...
Metapopulation models have historically treated a landscape as a collection of habitat patches separ...
Dispersal within metacommunities can play a major role in species persistence by promoting asynchron...
The connectivity of marine populations is often surprisingly lower than predicted by the dispersal c...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Climate change is rearranging the limits of geographic distributions of species. The populations inh...
Ocean currents, prevailing winds, and the hierarchical structures of river networks are known to cre...
Despite the considerable evidence showing that dispersal between habitat patches is often asymmetric...
A spatial metapopulation is a mosaic of interconnected patch populations. The complex routes of colo...
Almost all metapopulation modelling assumes that connectivity between patches is only a function of ...
Eco-evolutionary dynamics are now recognized to be highly relevant for population and community dyna...
1. Understanding the consequences of spatial structure on ecological dynamics is a central theme in ...
Metapopulations consist of a number of sub-populations connectedthrough the dispersal of migrants. I...
1. Understanding the consequences of spatial structure on ecological dynamics is a central theme in ...
Synthesising the relationships between complexity, connectivity, and the stability of large biologic...
1. Despite years of attention, the dynamics of species constrained to disperse within riverine netwo...
Metapopulation models have historically treated a landscape as a collection of habitat patches separ...
Dispersal within metacommunities can play a major role in species persistence by promoting asynchron...
The connectivity of marine populations is often surprisingly lower than predicted by the dispersal c...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Climate change is rearranging the limits of geographic distributions of species. The populations inh...