Animal movement strategies including migration, dispersal, nomadism, and residency are shaped by broad-scale spatial-temporal structuring of the environment, including factors such as the degrees of spatial variation, seasonality and inter-annual predictability. Animal movement strategies, in turn, interact with the characteristics of individuals and the local distribution of resources to determine local patterns of resource selection with complex and poorly understood implications for animal fitness. Here we present a multi-scale investigation of animal movement strategies and resource selection. We consider the degree to which spatial variation, seasonality, and inter-annual predictability in resources drive migration patterns among diffe...
Competition typically takes place in a spatial context, but eco-evolutionary models rarely address t...
Most animals forage under the risk of predation. An animal may balance the benefits gained from obta...
1. Patterns of animal movement associated with foraging lie at the heart of many ecological studies ...
Seasonal migration has evolved in many taxa as a response to predictable spatial and temporal variat...
Changes to animal movement in response to human-induced changes to the environment are of growing co...
Migration, the seasonal movement of individuals among different locations, is a behavior found throu...
Abstract. Mass migrations of vertebrate and arthropod species have long been perceived as some of th...
Most ecological and evolutionary processes are thought to critically depend on dispersal and individ...
Most ecological and evolutionary processes are thought to critically depend on dispersal and individ...
Animals move through their environment to capture prey, find mates, secure refuges, disperse to new ...
Environmental factors shape the spatial distribution and dynamics of populations. Understanding how ...
Abstract Despite its consequences for ecological processes and population dynamics, intra‐specific v...
Anthropogenic habitat fragmentation is a primary driver of species endangerment across the globe and...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 33-38).Translocation of threatened or vulnerable species is ...
Animal movements, whether spatially constrained or spread across broad spatial scales, are often mot...
Competition typically takes place in a spatial context, but eco-evolutionary models rarely address t...
Most animals forage under the risk of predation. An animal may balance the benefits gained from obta...
1. Patterns of animal movement associated with foraging lie at the heart of many ecological studies ...
Seasonal migration has evolved in many taxa as a response to predictable spatial and temporal variat...
Changes to animal movement in response to human-induced changes to the environment are of growing co...
Migration, the seasonal movement of individuals among different locations, is a behavior found throu...
Abstract. Mass migrations of vertebrate and arthropod species have long been perceived as some of th...
Most ecological and evolutionary processes are thought to critically depend on dispersal and individ...
Most ecological and evolutionary processes are thought to critically depend on dispersal and individ...
Animals move through their environment to capture prey, find mates, secure refuges, disperse to new ...
Environmental factors shape the spatial distribution and dynamics of populations. Understanding how ...
Abstract Despite its consequences for ecological processes and population dynamics, intra‐specific v...
Anthropogenic habitat fragmentation is a primary driver of species endangerment across the globe and...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 33-38).Translocation of threatened or vulnerable species is ...
Animal movements, whether spatially constrained or spread across broad spatial scales, are often mot...
Competition typically takes place in a spatial context, but eco-evolutionary models rarely address t...
Most animals forage under the risk of predation. An animal may balance the benefits gained from obta...
1. Patterns of animal movement associated with foraging lie at the heart of many ecological studies ...