Dispersal is a key process in population and evolutionary ecology. Individual decisions are affected by fitness consequences of dispersal, but these are difficult to measure in wild populations. A long-term dataset on a geographically closed bird population, the Mauritius kestrel, offers a rare opportunity to explore fitness consequences. Females dispersed further when the availability of local breeding sites was limited, whereas male dispersal correlated with phenotypic traits. Female but not male fitness was lower when they dispersed longer distances compared to settling close to home. These results suggest a cost of dispersal in females. We found evidence of both short- and long-term fitness consequences of natal dispersal in females, in...
Dispersal is of prime importance for many evolutionary processes and has been studied for decades. T...
Dispersal is a critical process influencing population dynamics, and patterns of dispersal movement ...
In most bird species, dispersal distance from the natal territory to a breeding territory is greater...
Natal dispersal is a demographic trait with profound evolutionary, ecological, and behavioral conseq...
Dispersal is commonly defined as the movement of an individual from its natal orprevious breeding si...
SummaryRecent work suggests that the environment experienced in early life can alter life histories ...
Dispersal is a common phenomenon in animals, with important consequences for individual fitness and ...
The distances that individuals disperse, from their natal site to the site of first breeding and bet...
We observed a change in the sex-specific rate of delayed natal dispersal in a stable population of S...
Dispersal is a critical process influencing population dynamics, and long-distance dispersal (LDD) c...
The long-term study of animal populations facilitates detailed analysis of processes otherwise diffi...
Dispersing individuals have the ability to link fragmented populations to each other, and influence ...
The distances that individuals disperse, from their natal site to the site of first breeding and bet...
Natal dispersal is assumed to be costly. Such costs can be difficult to detect, and fitness conseque...
Dispersal is of prime importance for many evolutionary processes and has been studied for decades. T...
Dispersal is a critical process influencing population dynamics, and patterns of dispersal movement ...
In most bird species, dispersal distance from the natal territory to a breeding territory is greater...
Natal dispersal is a demographic trait with profound evolutionary, ecological, and behavioral conseq...
Dispersal is commonly defined as the movement of an individual from its natal orprevious breeding si...
SummaryRecent work suggests that the environment experienced in early life can alter life histories ...
Dispersal is a common phenomenon in animals, with important consequences for individual fitness and ...
The distances that individuals disperse, from their natal site to the site of first breeding and bet...
We observed a change in the sex-specific rate of delayed natal dispersal in a stable population of S...
Dispersal is a critical process influencing population dynamics, and long-distance dispersal (LDD) c...
The long-term study of animal populations facilitates detailed analysis of processes otherwise diffi...
Dispersing individuals have the ability to link fragmented populations to each other, and influence ...
The distances that individuals disperse, from their natal site to the site of first breeding and bet...
Natal dispersal is assumed to be costly. Such costs can be difficult to detect, and fitness conseque...
Dispersal is of prime importance for many evolutionary processes and has been studied for decades. T...
Dispersal is a critical process influencing population dynamics, and patterns of dispersal movement ...
In most bird species, dispersal distance from the natal territory to a breeding territory is greater...