The physical and environmental attributes of landscapes often shape patterns of population connectivity by influencing dispersal and gene flow. Landscape effects on movement are typically evaluated for single species. However, inferences from multiple species are required for multi-species management strategies increasingly being applied in conservation. In this study, I compared the spatial genetic patterns of two amphibian species across the northeastern U.S. and estimated the influence of specific landscape features on observed genetic patterns. The spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum) and wood frog (Rana sylvatica) share many ecological attributes related to habitat use, phenology and site fidelity. However, I hypothesized that impo...
For many amphibian species, reduced landscape connectivity results in reduced genetic connectivity a...
One of the main questions in evolutionary and conservation biology is how geographical and environme...
Landscape features such as mountains, rivers, and ecological gradients may strongly affect patterns ...
The physical and environmental attributes of landscapes often shape patterns of population connectiv...
The physical and environmental attributes of landscapes often shape patterns of population connectiv...
Metapopulation-structured species can be negatively affected when landscape fragmentation impairs co...
Dispersal and gene flow within animal populations are influenced by the composition and configuratio...
Conversion of forests to agriculture often fragments distributions of forest species and can disrupt...
Functional connectivity is crucial for the persistence of a metapopulation, because migration among ...
Comparative landscape genetics has uncovered high levels of variation in which landscape factors aff...
A species' genetic structure often varies in response to ecological and landscape processes that dif...
Landscape heterogeneity plays an important role in population structure and divergence, particularly...
The explosive growth of empirical population genetics has seen a proliferation of analytical methods...
Species' geographic range limits are most often not demarcated by obvious dispersal barriers. Poor-q...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Ecological Society of Ame...
For many amphibian species, reduced landscape connectivity results in reduced genetic connectivity a...
One of the main questions in evolutionary and conservation biology is how geographical and environme...
Landscape features such as mountains, rivers, and ecological gradients may strongly affect patterns ...
The physical and environmental attributes of landscapes often shape patterns of population connectiv...
The physical and environmental attributes of landscapes often shape patterns of population connectiv...
Metapopulation-structured species can be negatively affected when landscape fragmentation impairs co...
Dispersal and gene flow within animal populations are influenced by the composition and configuratio...
Conversion of forests to agriculture often fragments distributions of forest species and can disrupt...
Functional connectivity is crucial for the persistence of a metapopulation, because migration among ...
Comparative landscape genetics has uncovered high levels of variation in which landscape factors aff...
A species' genetic structure often varies in response to ecological and landscape processes that dif...
Landscape heterogeneity plays an important role in population structure and divergence, particularly...
The explosive growth of empirical population genetics has seen a proliferation of analytical methods...
Species' geographic range limits are most often not demarcated by obvious dispersal barriers. Poor-q...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Ecological Society of Ame...
For many amphibian species, reduced landscape connectivity results in reduced genetic connectivity a...
One of the main questions in evolutionary and conservation biology is how geographical and environme...
Landscape features such as mountains, rivers, and ecological gradients may strongly affect patterns ...