The viability of metapopulations in fragmented landscapes has become a central theme in conservation biology. Landscape fragmentation is increasingly recognized as a dynamical process: in many situations, the quality of local habitats must be expected to undergo continual changes. Here we assess the implications of such recurrent local disturbances for the equilibrium density of metapopulations. Using a spatially explicit lattice model in which the considered metapopulation as well as the underlying landscape pattern change dynamically, we show that equilibrium metapopulation density is maximized at intermediate frequencies of local landscape disturbance. On both sides around this maximum, the metapopulation may go extinct. We show how t...
<div><p>Population viability of a single species, when evaluated with metapopulation based landscape...
The term extinction threshold refers to a critical value of some attribute, such as the amount of ha...
Population viability of a single species, when evaluated with metapopulation based landscape evaluat...
Habitat destruction and land use change are making the world in which natural populations live incre...
We review recent developments in spatially realistic metapopulation theory, which leads to quantitat...
Disturbances affect metapopulations directly through reductions in population size and indirectly th...
Disturbances affect metapopulations directly through reductions in population size and indirectly th...
Classical metapopulation theory assumes a static landscape. However, empirical evidence indicates ma...
Levins’s unstructured metapopulation model predicts that the equilibrium fraction of empty habitat p...
Habitat loss is known to pervade extinction thresholds in metapopulations. Such thresholds result fr...
We derive measures for assessing the value of an individual habitat fragment for the dynamics and pe...
A challenge for conservation management is to understand how population and habitat dynamics interac...
Habitat destruction and land use change are making the world in which natural populations live incre...
Many species exist as a collection of local populations occupying spatially distinct habitat patches...
Even when environments deteriorate gradually, ecosystems may shift abruptly from one state to anothe...
<div><p>Population viability of a single species, when evaluated with metapopulation based landscape...
The term extinction threshold refers to a critical value of some attribute, such as the amount of ha...
Population viability of a single species, when evaluated with metapopulation based landscape evaluat...
Habitat destruction and land use change are making the world in which natural populations live incre...
We review recent developments in spatially realistic metapopulation theory, which leads to quantitat...
Disturbances affect metapopulations directly through reductions in population size and indirectly th...
Disturbances affect metapopulations directly through reductions in population size and indirectly th...
Classical metapopulation theory assumes a static landscape. However, empirical evidence indicates ma...
Levins’s unstructured metapopulation model predicts that the equilibrium fraction of empty habitat p...
Habitat loss is known to pervade extinction thresholds in metapopulations. Such thresholds result fr...
We derive measures for assessing the value of an individual habitat fragment for the dynamics and pe...
A challenge for conservation management is to understand how population and habitat dynamics interac...
Habitat destruction and land use change are making the world in which natural populations live incre...
Many species exist as a collection of local populations occupying spatially distinct habitat patches...
Even when environments deteriorate gradually, ecosystems may shift abruptly from one state to anothe...
<div><p>Population viability of a single species, when evaluated with metapopulation based landscape...
The term extinction threshold refers to a critical value of some attribute, such as the amount of ha...
Population viability of a single species, when evaluated with metapopulation based landscape evaluat...