Population extinction is a fundamental ecological process which may be aggravated by the exchange of organisms between productive (source) and unproductive (sink) habitat patches. The extent to which such source-sink exchange affects extinction rates is unknown. We conducted an experiment in which metapopulation effects could be distinguished from source-sink effects in laboratory populations of Daphnia magna. Time-to-extinction in this experiment was maximized at intermediate levels of habitat fragmentation, which is consistent with a minority of theoretical models. These results provided a baseline for comparison with experimental treatments designed to detect effects of concentrating resources in source patches. These treatments showed t...
We used demographic and life-history data from natural populations of 43 species in order to pre...
Dispersal is a key process in metapopulations, as migrants genetically connect populations and enabl...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to biodiversity, yet separating their effects is ch...
Population extinction is a fundamental ecological process which may be aggravated by the exchange of...
Population extinction is a fundamental ecological process which may be aggra-vated by the exchange o...
Population extinction is a fundamental ecological process which may be aggravated by the exchange of...
Extinction is ubiquitous in natural systems and the ultimate fate of all biological populations. How...
Extinction risk is a key area of investigation for contemporary ecologists and conservation biologis...
Background Spatial structure across fragmented landscapes can enhance regional population persisten...
The fundamental processes that influence metapopulation dynamics (extinction and recolonization) wil...
To optimally manage a metapopulation, managers and conservation biologists can favor a type of habit...
In theory, predator-prey pairs with extinction-prone local populations can persist through metapopul...
Many species exist as a collection of local populations occupying spatially distinct habitat patches...
Metapopulations persist when local populations are rapidly recolonized following local extinctions. ...
The spatial configuration of metapopulations (numbers, sizes, and localization of patches) affects t...
We used demographic and life-history data from natural populations of 43 species in order to pre...
Dispersal is a key process in metapopulations, as migrants genetically connect populations and enabl...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to biodiversity, yet separating their effects is ch...
Population extinction is a fundamental ecological process which may be aggravated by the exchange of...
Population extinction is a fundamental ecological process which may be aggra-vated by the exchange o...
Population extinction is a fundamental ecological process which may be aggravated by the exchange of...
Extinction is ubiquitous in natural systems and the ultimate fate of all biological populations. How...
Extinction risk is a key area of investigation for contemporary ecologists and conservation biologis...
Background Spatial structure across fragmented landscapes can enhance regional population persisten...
The fundamental processes that influence metapopulation dynamics (extinction and recolonization) wil...
To optimally manage a metapopulation, managers and conservation biologists can favor a type of habit...
In theory, predator-prey pairs with extinction-prone local populations can persist through metapopul...
Many species exist as a collection of local populations occupying spatially distinct habitat patches...
Metapopulations persist when local populations are rapidly recolonized following local extinctions. ...
The spatial configuration of metapopulations (numbers, sizes, and localization of patches) affects t...
We used demographic and life-history data from natural populations of 43 species in order to pre...
Dispersal is a key process in metapopulations, as migrants genetically connect populations and enabl...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to biodiversity, yet separating their effects is ch...