According to the island syndrome and island rule hypotheses, island isolation and reduced area lead to phenotypic shifts in ecologically relevant traits in insular populations compared to mainland ones. These hypotheses have been built up with oceanic islands in mind or islands where isolation is high and colonization rate relatively limited. This set of hypotheses, however, may not be applicable to other inland-island systems or recently fragmented landscapes. We investigated how island life leads to phenotypic changes in two rodent metapopulations: deer mice and red-backed voles in a fragmented system on a river in Canada. From 2013 to 2016, we sampled 454 deer mice and 665 red-backed voles spread across 10 islands and six mainland site...
The Anacapa deer mouse is an endemic subspecies that inhabits Anacapa Island, part of Channel Island...
BACKGROUND: Since Darwin's pioneering work, evolutionary changes in isolated island populations of ...
Islands are or have been occupied by unusual species, such as dwarf proboscideans and giant rodents....
International audienceThe island syndrome hypothesis (ISH) stipulates that, as a result of local sel...
PhD 2009 QMIslands are extremely variable habitats, differing in shape, size, degree of isolation, g...
Island populations provide natural laboratories for studying key contributors to evolutionary change...
1. Habitat loss and fragmentation often leads to defaunation of large-bodied mammals, and their loss...
Evolutionary science shows that small, isolated populations are most at risk of extinction. In the A...
The considerable threats of invasive rodents to island biodiversity are likely to be compounded by c...
We perform a meta-analysis on morphological data from four island rodent populations exhibiting micr...
Following human occupation, the house mouse has colonized numerous islands, exposing the species to ...
Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain size changes in insular mammals, but no single variabl...
Islands are generally colonized by few individuals which could lead to a founder effect causing loss...
The Anacapa deer mouse is an endemic subspecies that inhabits Anacapa Island, part of Channel Island...
BACKGROUND: Since Darwin's pioneering work, evolutionary changes in isolated island populations of ...
Islands are or have been occupied by unusual species, such as dwarf proboscideans and giant rodents....
International audienceThe island syndrome hypothesis (ISH) stipulates that, as a result of local sel...
PhD 2009 QMIslands are extremely variable habitats, differing in shape, size, degree of isolation, g...
Island populations provide natural laboratories for studying key contributors to evolutionary change...
1. Habitat loss and fragmentation often leads to defaunation of large-bodied mammals, and their loss...
Evolutionary science shows that small, isolated populations are most at risk of extinction. In the A...
The considerable threats of invasive rodents to island biodiversity are likely to be compounded by c...
We perform a meta-analysis on morphological data from four island rodent populations exhibiting micr...
Following human occupation, the house mouse has colonized numerous islands, exposing the species to ...
Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain size changes in insular mammals, but no single variabl...
Islands are generally colonized by few individuals which could lead to a founder effect causing loss...
The Anacapa deer mouse is an endemic subspecies that inhabits Anacapa Island, part of Channel Island...
BACKGROUND: Since Darwin's pioneering work, evolutionary changes in isolated island populations of ...
Islands are or have been occupied by unusual species, such as dwarf proboscideans and giant rodents....