International audienceAbstract For sea snakes as for many types of animals, long-term studies on population biology are rare and hence, we do not understand the degree to which annual variation in population sizes is driven by density-dependent regulation versus by stochastic abiotic factors. We monitored three populations of turtle-headed sea snakes ( Emydocephalus annulatus ) in New Caledonia over an 18-year period. Annual recruitment (% change in numbers) showed negative density-dependence: that is, recruitment increased when population densities were low, and decreased when densities were high. Windy weather during winter increased survival of neonates, perhaps by shielding them from predation; but those same weather conditions reduced ...
Marine environments show strong cycles at daily (tidal), monthly (lunar) and seasonal timeframes, an...
Natural and anthropogenic changes in the marine environment can strongly influence the biology and b...
A review of several long-term studies has recently suggested that snakes might be declining in large...
Abstract For sea snakes as for many types of animals, long-term studies on population biology are ra...
For sea snakes as for many types of animals, long-term studies on population biology are rare and he...
International audienceAbstract Life-history traits such as rates of growth, survival and reproductio...
Life-history traits such as rates of growth, survival and reproduction can vary though time within a...
Resource availability, acquisition and assimilation drive trade-offs and shape life-history strategi...
1. Several tetrapod lineages that have evolved to exploit marine environments (e.g. seals, seabirds,...
In the present study we explore how annual variation in climate (late wet-season rainfall) affects p...
Abstract Tidal cycles are known to affect the ecology of many marine animals, but logistical obstacl...
Aipysurus laevis and Emydocephalus annulatus typically occur in spatially discrete populations, char...
The question of whether spatial aspects of evolution differ in marine versus terrestrial realms has ...
A population of dice snakes (Natrix tessellate) monitored since 2008 in a small island (18 ha, 850 m...
Snakes represent a sizable fraction of vertebrate biodiversity, but until recently, data on their d...
Marine environments show strong cycles at daily (tidal), monthly (lunar) and seasonal timeframes, an...
Natural and anthropogenic changes in the marine environment can strongly influence the biology and b...
A review of several long-term studies has recently suggested that snakes might be declining in large...
Abstract For sea snakes as for many types of animals, long-term studies on population biology are ra...
For sea snakes as for many types of animals, long-term studies on population biology are rare and he...
International audienceAbstract Life-history traits such as rates of growth, survival and reproductio...
Life-history traits such as rates of growth, survival and reproduction can vary though time within a...
Resource availability, acquisition and assimilation drive trade-offs and shape life-history strategi...
1. Several tetrapod lineages that have evolved to exploit marine environments (e.g. seals, seabirds,...
In the present study we explore how annual variation in climate (late wet-season rainfall) affects p...
Abstract Tidal cycles are known to affect the ecology of many marine animals, but logistical obstacl...
Aipysurus laevis and Emydocephalus annulatus typically occur in spatially discrete populations, char...
The question of whether spatial aspects of evolution differ in marine versus terrestrial realms has ...
A population of dice snakes (Natrix tessellate) monitored since 2008 in a small island (18 ha, 850 m...
Snakes represent a sizable fraction of vertebrate biodiversity, but until recently, data on their d...
Marine environments show strong cycles at daily (tidal), monthly (lunar) and seasonal timeframes, an...
Natural and anthropogenic changes in the marine environment can strongly influence the biology and b...
A review of several long-term studies has recently suggested that snakes might be declining in large...