Human land use is known to homogenize biotic communities, increasing similarity in their genetic, taxonomic and functional diversity. Explanations have focused almost exclusively on human-mediated extinction and range expansion. However, homogenization could also be produced by land use driving selection for similar traits across species. We propose a novel hypothesis to explain how human land use homogenizes dispersal ability across species. With habitat loss and increasing human land use intensities there should be larger increases in the costs of dispersal for dispersive than sedentary species, because dispersive species interact with non-habitat more frequently. In contrast, the benefits of dispersal should increase more for sedentary t...
In most animal species, dispersing individuals possess phenotypic attributes that mitigate the costs...
Some studies have found that dispersal rates and distances increase with density, indicating that de...
Anthropogenic habitat fragmentation of species that live in naturally patchy metapopulations such as...
Human land use is known to homogenize biotic communities, increasing similarity in their genetic, ta...
Gene flow through dispersal has traditionally been thought to function as a force opposing evolution...
Fine-scale landscape change can alter dispersal patterns of animals, thus influencing connectivity o...
Disentangling the factors shaping species distributions remains a central goal in biogeography, ecol...
Aim: Theory suggests that increasing productivity and climate stability towards the tropics favours ...
Dispersal is commonly defined as the movement of an individual from its natal orprevious breeding si...
New species are sometimes known to arise as a consequence of the dispersal and establishment of popu...
Habitat fragmentation is one of the most severe threats to biodiversity as it may lead to changes in...
The evolutionary trajectories associated with demographic, genetic and spatial disequilibrium have b...
Range expansions are limited by two key factors. These are (1) dispersal, which includes a species’ ...
Anthropogenic alterations to landscape structure and composition can have significant impacts on bio...
Both neutral and adaptive evolutionary processes can cause population divergence, but their relative...
In most animal species, dispersing individuals possess phenotypic attributes that mitigate the costs...
Some studies have found that dispersal rates and distances increase with density, indicating that de...
Anthropogenic habitat fragmentation of species that live in naturally patchy metapopulations such as...
Human land use is known to homogenize biotic communities, increasing similarity in their genetic, ta...
Gene flow through dispersal has traditionally been thought to function as a force opposing evolution...
Fine-scale landscape change can alter dispersal patterns of animals, thus influencing connectivity o...
Disentangling the factors shaping species distributions remains a central goal in biogeography, ecol...
Aim: Theory suggests that increasing productivity and climate stability towards the tropics favours ...
Dispersal is commonly defined as the movement of an individual from its natal orprevious breeding si...
New species are sometimes known to arise as a consequence of the dispersal and establishment of popu...
Habitat fragmentation is one of the most severe threats to biodiversity as it may lead to changes in...
The evolutionary trajectories associated with demographic, genetic and spatial disequilibrium have b...
Range expansions are limited by two key factors. These are (1) dispersal, which includes a species’ ...
Anthropogenic alterations to landscape structure and composition can have significant impacts on bio...
Both neutral and adaptive evolutionary processes can cause population divergence, but their relative...
In most animal species, dispersing individuals possess phenotypic attributes that mitigate the costs...
Some studies have found that dispersal rates and distances increase with density, indicating that de...
Anthropogenic habitat fragmentation of species that live in naturally patchy metapopulations such as...