How population size influences quantitative genetic variation and differentiation among natural, fragmented populations remains unresolved. Small, isolated populations might occupy poor quality habitats and lose genetic variation more rapidly due to genetic drift than large populations. Genetic drift might furthermore overcome selection as population size decreases. Collectively, this might result in directional changes in additive genetic variation (VA) and trait differentiation (QST) from small to large population size. Alternatively, small populations might exhibit larger variation in VA and QST if habitat fragmentation increases variability in habitat types. We explored these alternatives by investigating VA and QST using nine fragmente...
Habitat loss and fragmentation often result in small, isolated populations vulnerable to environment...
Salmonid populations of many rivers are rapidly declining. One possible explanation is that habitat ...
The study of population differentiation in the context of ecological speciation is commonly assessed...
How population size influences quantitative genetic variation and differentiation among natural, fra...
Whether and how habitat fragmentation and population size jointly affect adaptive genetic variation ...
Adult census population size (N) and effective number of breeders (Nb) are highly relevant for desig...
Salmonid populations of many rivers are rapidly declining. One possible explanation is that habitat ...
The effective population size (Ne) is notoriously difficult to accurately estimate in wild populatio...
The conservation genetics small population paradigm predicts reduced quantitative genetic variation ...
Published versionA reduction in population size due to habitat fragmentation can alter the relative ...
Fitness related traits often show spatial variation across populations of widely distributed species...
Linear and heterogeneous habitat makes headwater stream networks an ideal ecosystem in which to test...
The effective number of breeders that give rise to a cohort (Nb) is a promising metric for genetic m...
Habitat loss and fragmentation often result in small, isolated populations vulnerable to environment...
Salmonid populations of many rivers are rapidly declining. One possible explanation is that habitat ...
The study of population differentiation in the context of ecological speciation is commonly assessed...
How population size influences quantitative genetic variation and differentiation among natural, fra...
Whether and how habitat fragmentation and population size jointly affect adaptive genetic variation ...
Adult census population size (N) and effective number of breeders (Nb) are highly relevant for desig...
Salmonid populations of many rivers are rapidly declining. One possible explanation is that habitat ...
The effective population size (Ne) is notoriously difficult to accurately estimate in wild populatio...
The conservation genetics small population paradigm predicts reduced quantitative genetic variation ...
Published versionA reduction in population size due to habitat fragmentation can alter the relative ...
Fitness related traits often show spatial variation across populations of widely distributed species...
Linear and heterogeneous habitat makes headwater stream networks an ideal ecosystem in which to test...
The effective number of breeders that give rise to a cohort (Nb) is a promising metric for genetic m...
Habitat loss and fragmentation often result in small, isolated populations vulnerable to environment...
Salmonid populations of many rivers are rapidly declining. One possible explanation is that habitat ...
The study of population differentiation in the context of ecological speciation is commonly assessed...