Habitat fragmentation is generally considered to be detrimental to the persistence of natural populations. In nature management, one therefore tends to prefer few large nature reserves over many small nature reserves having equal total area. This paper examines whether this preference is warranted in a metapopulation framework with circular reserves (patches) by formulating the dependence of metapopulation persistence on the size and number of reserves, both of which depend on reserve radius if the total area is kept constant. Two measures of metapopulation persistence are used: R0, the number of patches colonized by an occupied patch during its lifetime as an occupied patch, and Te, the expected time to extinction. These two measures are f...
Disturbances affect metapopulations directly through reductions in population size and indirectly th...
Protected areas form the cornerstone of global efforts to conserve biodiversity. The goal of systema...
Classical metapopulation (CM) theory considers that species persistence in the landscape depends on ...
Habitat fragmentation is generally considered to be detrimental to the persistence of natural popula...
Metapopulation theory teaches that the viability of metapopulations may be enlarged by decreasing th...
Levins’s unstructured metapopulation model predicts that the equilibrium fraction of empty habitat p...
We define the minimum viable metapopulation (MVM) size as the minimum number of interacting local po...
We derive measures for assessing the value of an individual habitat fragment for the dynamics and pe...
We examine the question of the optimal number of reserves that should be established to maximize the...
Habitat loss and fragmentation has created metapopulations where there were once continuous populati...
Wherever wildlife management concerns the movement of individuals across structured habitat, its sca...
Although the aim of conservation planning is the persistence of biodiversity, current methods trade-...
Two important processes determining the dynamics of spatially structured populations are dispersal a...
Classical metapopulation theory assumes a static landscape. However, empirical evidence indicates ma...
From a theoretical viewpoint, nature management basically has two options to prolong metapopulation ...
Disturbances affect metapopulations directly through reductions in population size and indirectly th...
Protected areas form the cornerstone of global efforts to conserve biodiversity. The goal of systema...
Classical metapopulation (CM) theory considers that species persistence in the landscape depends on ...
Habitat fragmentation is generally considered to be detrimental to the persistence of natural popula...
Metapopulation theory teaches that the viability of metapopulations may be enlarged by decreasing th...
Levins’s unstructured metapopulation model predicts that the equilibrium fraction of empty habitat p...
We define the minimum viable metapopulation (MVM) size as the minimum number of interacting local po...
We derive measures for assessing the value of an individual habitat fragment for the dynamics and pe...
We examine the question of the optimal number of reserves that should be established to maximize the...
Habitat loss and fragmentation has created metapopulations where there were once continuous populati...
Wherever wildlife management concerns the movement of individuals across structured habitat, its sca...
Although the aim of conservation planning is the persistence of biodiversity, current methods trade-...
Two important processes determining the dynamics of spatially structured populations are dispersal a...
Classical metapopulation theory assumes a static landscape. However, empirical evidence indicates ma...
From a theoretical viewpoint, nature management basically has two options to prolong metapopulation ...
Disturbances affect metapopulations directly through reductions in population size and indirectly th...
Protected areas form the cornerstone of global efforts to conserve biodiversity. The goal of systema...
Classical metapopulation (CM) theory considers that species persistence in the landscape depends on ...