1. The unidirectional movement of animals between breeding patches (i.e., breeding dispersal) has profound implications for the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of spatially structured populations. In spatiotemporally variable environments, individuals are expected to adjust their dispersal decisions according to information gathered on the environmental and/or social cues that reflect the fitness prospects in a given breeding patch (i.e., informed dispersal). 2. A paucity of empirical work limits our understanding of the ability of animals to depart from low quality breeding patches and settle in high quality breeding patches. We examined the capacity of individuals to respond to stochastic changes in habitat quality via informed bree...
Dispersers are often assumed to have the mean phenotype observed across the entire metapopulation, d...
International audienceIteroparity is an adaptive response to uncer- tainty in reproductive success. ...
Dispersal is the movement of individuals from their natal population to a different breeding populat...
International audienceDispersal is a central mechanism in ecology and evolution. Dispersal evolution...
International audienceDispersal (i.e. movement from a natal or breeding site to another breeding sit...
International audienceThere is growing evidence that anthropogenic landscapes can strongly influence...
International audienceMovement, both within an individual’s home range and at the scale of dispersal...
The spatio-temporal dynamics of amphibian populations and the models that describe them are largely ...
Although amphibians typically exhibit high site fidelity and low dispersal, they do undertake rare, ...
Life-history theory states that, during the lifetime of an individual, resources are allocated to ei...
Maintaining amphibian populations in fragmented landscapes depends on preserving functional connecti...
Species with partial migration, where a portion of a population migrates and the other remains resid...
Dispersal is a central process in ecology and evolution. It strongly influences the dynamics of spat...
Human-induced habitat change is widely regarded as a primary factor threatening the persistence of s...
Individuals vary greatly in the distance they disperse, and in doing so, strongly affect ecological ...
Dispersers are often assumed to have the mean phenotype observed across the entire metapopulation, d...
International audienceIteroparity is an adaptive response to uncer- tainty in reproductive success. ...
Dispersal is the movement of individuals from their natal population to a different breeding populat...
International audienceDispersal is a central mechanism in ecology and evolution. Dispersal evolution...
International audienceDispersal (i.e. movement from a natal or breeding site to another breeding sit...
International audienceThere is growing evidence that anthropogenic landscapes can strongly influence...
International audienceMovement, both within an individual’s home range and at the scale of dispersal...
The spatio-temporal dynamics of amphibian populations and the models that describe them are largely ...
Although amphibians typically exhibit high site fidelity and low dispersal, they do undertake rare, ...
Life-history theory states that, during the lifetime of an individual, resources are allocated to ei...
Maintaining amphibian populations in fragmented landscapes depends on preserving functional connecti...
Species with partial migration, where a portion of a population migrates and the other remains resid...
Dispersal is a central process in ecology and evolution. It strongly influences the dynamics of spat...
Human-induced habitat change is widely regarded as a primary factor threatening the persistence of s...
Individuals vary greatly in the distance they disperse, and in doing so, strongly affect ecological ...
Dispersers are often assumed to have the mean phenotype observed across the entire metapopulation, d...
International audienceIteroparity is an adaptive response to uncer- tainty in reproductive success. ...
Dispersal is the movement of individuals from their natal population to a different breeding populat...