Human-mediated range expansions have increased in recent decades and represent unique opportunities to evaluate genetic outcomes of establishing peripheral populations across broad expansion fronts. Over the past century, coyotes (Canis latrans) have undergone a pervasive range expansion and now inhabit every state in the continental United States. Coyote expansion into eastern North America was facilitated by anthropogenic landscape changes and followed two broad expansion fronts. The northern expansion extended through the Great Lakes region and southern Canada, where hybridization with remnant wolf populations was common. The southern and more recent expansion front occurred approximately 40 years later and across territory where gray wo...
The potential for rapid adaptive evolution is a subject of great interest in evolutionary biology. I...
The geographic distribution of coyotes (Canis latrans) has dramatically expanded since 1900, spreadi...
Top predators are disappearing worldwide, significantly changing ecosystems that depend on top-down ...
Human-mediated range expansions have increased in recent decades and represent unique opportunities ...
Hybrid zones typically contain novel gene combinations that can be tested by natural selection in a ...
The evolutionary importance of hybridization as a source of new adaptive genetic variation is rapidl...
Range expansion is a widespread biological process, with well described theoretical expectations for...
Prior to 1900, coyotes (Canis latrans) were restricted to the western and central regions of North A...
Distinguishing genetically differentiated populations within hybrid zones and determining the mechan...
The expansion of coyotes (Canis latrans) into the eastern United States has had major consequences f...
The geographic distribution of coyotes (Canis latrans) has dramatically expanded since 1900, spreadi...
When hybridizing species come into contact, understanding the processes that regulate their interact...
Theory predicts that range expansion results in genetic diversity loss in colonizing populations. Ra...
Eastern wolves have hybridized extensively with coyotes and gray wolves and are listed as a 'species...
Range expansion is a widespread biological process, with well‐described theoretical expectations ass...
The potential for rapid adaptive evolution is a subject of great interest in evolutionary biology. I...
The geographic distribution of coyotes (Canis latrans) has dramatically expanded since 1900, spreadi...
Top predators are disappearing worldwide, significantly changing ecosystems that depend on top-down ...
Human-mediated range expansions have increased in recent decades and represent unique opportunities ...
Hybrid zones typically contain novel gene combinations that can be tested by natural selection in a ...
The evolutionary importance of hybridization as a source of new adaptive genetic variation is rapidl...
Range expansion is a widespread biological process, with well described theoretical expectations for...
Prior to 1900, coyotes (Canis latrans) were restricted to the western and central regions of North A...
Distinguishing genetically differentiated populations within hybrid zones and determining the mechan...
The expansion of coyotes (Canis latrans) into the eastern United States has had major consequences f...
The geographic distribution of coyotes (Canis latrans) has dramatically expanded since 1900, spreadi...
When hybridizing species come into contact, understanding the processes that regulate their interact...
Theory predicts that range expansion results in genetic diversity loss in colonizing populations. Ra...
Eastern wolves have hybridized extensively with coyotes and gray wolves and are listed as a 'species...
Range expansion is a widespread biological process, with well‐described theoretical expectations ass...
The potential for rapid adaptive evolution is a subject of great interest in evolutionary biology. I...
The geographic distribution of coyotes (Canis latrans) has dramatically expanded since 1900, spreadi...
Top predators are disappearing worldwide, significantly changing ecosystems that depend on top-down ...