Limited dispersal is commonly used to explain differences in diversification rates. An obvious but unexplored factor affecting dispersal is the mode of locomotion used by animals. Whether individuals walk, swim or fly can dictate the type and severity of geographical barriers to dispersal, and determine the general range over which genetic differentiation might occur. We collated information on locomotion mode and genetic differentiation (FST ) among vertebrate populations from over 400 published articles. Our results showed that vertebrate species that walk tend to have higher genetic differentiation among populations than species that swim or fly. Within species that swim, vertebrates in freshwater systems have higher genetic differentiat...
Locomotion is one of the major energetic costs faced by animals and various strategies have evolved ...
Human activities are responsible for the translocation of vast amounts of organisms, altering natura...
The occurrence of contemporary ecotype formation through adaptive divergence of populations within t...
Vagility is defined as the relative capacity for movement. We developed previously a quantitative me...
Gene flow is widely thought to homogenize spatially separate populations, eroding effects of diverge...
Movement is one of the most conspicuous features in the life of animals. Strikingly, individuals dif...
Across taxa, individuals vary in how far they disperse, with most individuals staying close to their...
The exchange of individuals between populations influences demographic connectivity on the ecologica...
Dispersal is considered to be a species-specific trait, but intraspecific variation can be high. How...
The extent of increasing anthropogenic impacts on large marine vertebrates partly depends on the ani...
Dispersal, the behaviour ensuring gene flow, tends to covary with a number of morphological, ecologi...
Gene flow is widely thought to homogenize spatially separate populations, eroding effects of diverge...
International audienceVariation in dispersal capacity may influence population genetic variation and...
International audienceUnderstanding how and why individual movement translates into dispersal betwee...
Locomotion is one of the major energetic costs faced by animals and various strategies have evolved ...
Human activities are responsible for the translocation of vast amounts of organisms, altering natura...
The occurrence of contemporary ecotype formation through adaptive divergence of populations within t...
Vagility is defined as the relative capacity for movement. We developed previously a quantitative me...
Gene flow is widely thought to homogenize spatially separate populations, eroding effects of diverge...
Movement is one of the most conspicuous features in the life of animals. Strikingly, individuals dif...
Across taxa, individuals vary in how far they disperse, with most individuals staying close to their...
The exchange of individuals between populations influences demographic connectivity on the ecologica...
Dispersal is considered to be a species-specific trait, but intraspecific variation can be high. How...
The extent of increasing anthropogenic impacts on large marine vertebrates partly depends on the ani...
Dispersal, the behaviour ensuring gene flow, tends to covary with a number of morphological, ecologi...
Gene flow is widely thought to homogenize spatially separate populations, eroding effects of diverge...
International audienceVariation in dispersal capacity may influence population genetic variation and...
International audienceUnderstanding how and why individual movement translates into dispersal betwee...
Locomotion is one of the major energetic costs faced by animals and various strategies have evolved ...
Human activities are responsible for the translocation of vast amounts of organisms, altering natura...
The occurrence of contemporary ecotype formation through adaptive divergence of populations within t...