Selective harvesting regimes are often implemented because age and sex classes contribute differently to population dynamics and hunters show preferences associated with body size and trophy value. We reviewed the literature on how such cropping regimes affect the demography of the remaining population (here termed demographic side effects ). First, we examined the implications of removing a large proportion of a specific age or sex class. Such harvesting strategies often bias the population sex ratio toward females and reduce the mean age of males, which may consequently delay birth dates, reduce birth synchrony, delay body mass development, and alter offspring sex ratios. Second, we reviewed the side effects associated with the sel...
Hunting is commonly used by wildlife agencies to provide recreational opportunities and to reduce hu...
Harvesting is often size‐selective, and in species with sexual size dimorphism, it may also be sex‐s...
Human harvesting is often a major mortality factor and, hence, an important proximate factor driving...
Selective harvesting regimes are often implemented because age and sex classes contribute differentl...
Harvesting can have a substantial impact on population dynamics and individual performance in wild p...
Harvesting for food or sport is often non-random with respect to demographic state, such as size or ...
Female ungulates are often selectively harvested according to their reproductive status. Because ung...
Abstract Harvest, through its intensity and regulation, often results in selection on female reprodu...
Harvesting is a human-imposed selective pressure. Harvest-induced mortality is not random and mostly...
Harvest by means of hunting is a commonly used tool in large carnivore management. To evaluate the e...
There is increasing evidence of indirect effects of hunting on populations. In species with sexuall...
1. The removal of individuals through hunting can destabilize social structure, potentially affectin...
Demographic models accounting for operational sex ratio (OSR) show that male numbers can have a subs...
Background: Little is known about the impact of prey sexual dimorphism on predator-prey dynamics and...
1. There is growing concern about the evolutionary consequences of human harvesting on pheno-typic t...
Hunting is commonly used by wildlife agencies to provide recreational opportunities and to reduce hu...
Harvesting is often size‐selective, and in species with sexual size dimorphism, it may also be sex‐s...
Human harvesting is often a major mortality factor and, hence, an important proximate factor driving...
Selective harvesting regimes are often implemented because age and sex classes contribute differentl...
Harvesting can have a substantial impact on population dynamics and individual performance in wild p...
Harvesting for food or sport is often non-random with respect to demographic state, such as size or ...
Female ungulates are often selectively harvested according to their reproductive status. Because ung...
Abstract Harvest, through its intensity and regulation, often results in selection on female reprodu...
Harvesting is a human-imposed selective pressure. Harvest-induced mortality is not random and mostly...
Harvest by means of hunting is a commonly used tool in large carnivore management. To evaluate the e...
There is increasing evidence of indirect effects of hunting on populations. In species with sexuall...
1. The removal of individuals through hunting can destabilize social structure, potentially affectin...
Demographic models accounting for operational sex ratio (OSR) show that male numbers can have a subs...
Background: Little is known about the impact of prey sexual dimorphism on predator-prey dynamics and...
1. There is growing concern about the evolutionary consequences of human harvesting on pheno-typic t...
Hunting is commonly used by wildlife agencies to provide recreational opportunities and to reduce hu...
Harvesting is often size‐selective, and in species with sexual size dimorphism, it may also be sex‐s...
Human harvesting is often a major mortality factor and, hence, an important proximate factor driving...