The assessment of disturbance effects on wildlife and resulting mitigation efforts are founded on edge-effect theory. According to the classical view, the abundance of animals affected by human disturbance should increase monotonically with distance from disturbed areas to reach a maximum at remote locations. Here we show that distance-dependent movement taxis can skew abundance distributions toward disturbed areas. We develop an advection-diffusion model based on basic movement behavior commonly observed in animal populations and parameterize the model from observations on radio-collared caribou in a boreal ecosystem. The model predicts maximum abundance at 3.7 km from cutovers and roads. Consistently, aerial surveys conducted over 161,920...
Woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) are a threatened species throughout Canada. Special man...
Anthropogenic disturbances have been demonstrated to affect animal behavior, distribution, and abund...
As human encroachment in natural habitats increases ubiquitously, understanding its impacts on wildl...
The assessment of disturbance effects on wildlife and resulting mitigation efforts are founded on ed...
Although prey species typically respond to the most limiting factors at coarse spatiotemporal scales...
Although prey species typically respond to the most limiting factors at coarse spatiotemporal scales...
Within the rapidly developing field of movement ecology, much attention has been given to studying t...
Background Global increases in human activity threaten connectivity of animal habit...
Human disturbances are increasing in Arctic regions and have been suggested as one of the main fact...
Future human land use and climate change may disrupt movement behaviors of terrestrial animals, ther...
Loss or alteration of forest ecosystems due to anthropogenic activities has prompted the need for mi...
Anthropogenic disturbances have been demonstrated to affect animal behavior, distribution, and abund...
1. Understanding why heterogeneity exists in animal-habitat spatial relationships is critical for id...
Rapid landscape alteration associated with human activity is currently challenging the evolved dynam...
1. Movement patterns offer a rich source of information on animal behaviour and the ecological signi...
Woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) are a threatened species throughout Canada. Special man...
Anthropogenic disturbances have been demonstrated to affect animal behavior, distribution, and abund...
As human encroachment in natural habitats increases ubiquitously, understanding its impacts on wildl...
The assessment of disturbance effects on wildlife and resulting mitigation efforts are founded on ed...
Although prey species typically respond to the most limiting factors at coarse spatiotemporal scales...
Although prey species typically respond to the most limiting factors at coarse spatiotemporal scales...
Within the rapidly developing field of movement ecology, much attention has been given to studying t...
Background Global increases in human activity threaten connectivity of animal habit...
Human disturbances are increasing in Arctic regions and have been suggested as one of the main fact...
Future human land use and climate change may disrupt movement behaviors of terrestrial animals, ther...
Loss or alteration of forest ecosystems due to anthropogenic activities has prompted the need for mi...
Anthropogenic disturbances have been demonstrated to affect animal behavior, distribution, and abund...
1. Understanding why heterogeneity exists in animal-habitat spatial relationships is critical for id...
Rapid landscape alteration associated with human activity is currently challenging the evolved dynam...
1. Movement patterns offer a rich source of information on animal behaviour and the ecological signi...
Woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) are a threatened species throughout Canada. Special man...
Anthropogenic disturbances have been demonstrated to affect animal behavior, distribution, and abund...
As human encroachment in natural habitats increases ubiquitously, understanding its impacts on wildl...