Because of the extreme ecological and environmental changes along an urban-rural gradient, it has been proposed that urbanised and non-urbanised populations of the same species may be distinctly isolated. There is evidence that urban populations have become significantly different from the original forest populations in several aspects. However, little is known about the extent to which urban and non-urban populations are genetically isolated from each other. We tested the hypothesis of genetic differentiation by comparing the genomic DNA of an urban and a nearby forest-living European blackbird (Turdus merula) population. The present results suggest that, based on amplified fragment length polymorphism analysis, the urban population studie...
Successful urban colonisation by formerly rural species represents an ideal situation in which to st...
House sparrow (Passer domesticus) populations have suffered major declines in urban as well as rural...
Urbanization is considered a global threat to biodiversity; the growth of cities results in an incre...
Urban areas are expanding rapidly, but a few native species have successfully colonized them. The pr...
A large and growing proportion of the world is impacted directly by human activities; among the most...
Aim The process of urbanization can lead to specialist species being replaced by generalist species ...
Urban sprawl is one of the most common landscape alterations occurring worldwide, and there is a gro...
Urban areas occupy a large and growing proportion of the earth. Such sites exhibit distinctive chara...
Urbanisation is increasing worldwide, and there is now ample evidence of phenotypic changes in wild ...
Rates of phenotypic change are greater in cities than in any other habitat. Consequently, urban habi...
International audienceUrbanization is a growing concern challenging the evolutionary potential of wi...
Urbanization fragments landscapes and can impede the movement of organisms through their environment...
Successful urban colonisation by formerly rural species represents an ideal situation in which to st...
House sparrow (Passer domesticus) populations have suffered major declines in urban as well as rural...
Urbanization is considered a global threat to biodiversity; the growth of cities results in an incre...
Urban areas are expanding rapidly, but a few native species have successfully colonized them. The pr...
A large and growing proportion of the world is impacted directly by human activities; among the most...
Aim The process of urbanization can lead to specialist species being replaced by generalist species ...
Urban sprawl is one of the most common landscape alterations occurring worldwide, and there is a gro...
Urban areas occupy a large and growing proportion of the earth. Such sites exhibit distinctive chara...
Urbanisation is increasing worldwide, and there is now ample evidence of phenotypic changes in wild ...
Rates of phenotypic change are greater in cities than in any other habitat. Consequently, urban habi...
International audienceUrbanization is a growing concern challenging the evolutionary potential of wi...
Urbanization fragments landscapes and can impede the movement of organisms through their environment...
Successful urban colonisation by formerly rural species represents an ideal situation in which to st...
House sparrow (Passer domesticus) populations have suffered major declines in urban as well as rural...
Urbanization is considered a global threat to biodiversity; the growth of cities results in an incre...