Gene flow through dispersal has traditionally been thought to function as a force opposing evolutionary differentiation. However, directional gene flow may actually reinforce divergence of populations in close proximity. This study documents the phenotypic differentiation over more than two decades in body size (tarsus length) at a very short spatial scale (1.1 km) within a population of pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca inhabiting deciduous and coniferous habitats. Unlike females, males breeding in the deciduous forest were consistently larger than those from the managed coniferous forest. This assortment by size is likely explained by preset habitat preferences leading to dominance of the largest males and exclusion of the smallest ones...
Fine-scale landscape change can alter dispersal patterns of animals, thus influencing connectivity o...
Two recent studies of wild bird populations provide new insights into mechanisms of microevolutionar...
Patterns of sex-biased dispersal are typically consistent within taxa, e.g., female-biased in birds ...
Gene flow through dispersal has traditionally been thought to function as a force opposing evolution...
Dispersers are not a random subset of the source population, and there is considerable evidence that...
The matching habitat choice hypothesis holds that individuals with different phenotypes actively sel...
Character displacement can reduce costly interspecific interactions between young species. We invest...
Dispersers are not a random subset of the source population, and there is considerable evidence that...
Human land use is known to homogenize biotic communities, increasing similarity in their genetic, ta...
Background: Habitat selection may have profound evolutionary consequences, but they strongly depend ...
Evolutionary theory predicts that local population divergence will depend on the balance between the...
Between 1988 and 2016, we investigated the effects of breeding density and body size on natal disper...
In most animal species, dispersing individuals possess phenotypic attributes that mitigate the costs...
Some studies have found that dispersal rates and distances increase with density, indicating that de...
Dispersal is commonly defined as the movement of an individual from its natal orprevious breeding si...
Fine-scale landscape change can alter dispersal patterns of animals, thus influencing connectivity o...
Two recent studies of wild bird populations provide new insights into mechanisms of microevolutionar...
Patterns of sex-biased dispersal are typically consistent within taxa, e.g., female-biased in birds ...
Gene flow through dispersal has traditionally been thought to function as a force opposing evolution...
Dispersers are not a random subset of the source population, and there is considerable evidence that...
The matching habitat choice hypothesis holds that individuals with different phenotypes actively sel...
Character displacement can reduce costly interspecific interactions between young species. We invest...
Dispersers are not a random subset of the source population, and there is considerable evidence that...
Human land use is known to homogenize biotic communities, increasing similarity in their genetic, ta...
Background: Habitat selection may have profound evolutionary consequences, but they strongly depend ...
Evolutionary theory predicts that local population divergence will depend on the balance between the...
Between 1988 and 2016, we investigated the effects of breeding density and body size on natal disper...
In most animal species, dispersing individuals possess phenotypic attributes that mitigate the costs...
Some studies have found that dispersal rates and distances increase with density, indicating that de...
Dispersal is commonly defined as the movement of an individual from its natal orprevious breeding si...
Fine-scale landscape change can alter dispersal patterns of animals, thus influencing connectivity o...
Two recent studies of wild bird populations provide new insights into mechanisms of microevolutionar...
Patterns of sex-biased dispersal are typically consistent within taxa, e.g., female-biased in birds ...