1. Synchronous fluctuations of geographically separated populations are in general explained by the Moran effect, i.e. a common influence on the local population dynamics of environmental variables that are correlated in space. Empirical support for such a Moran effect has been difficult to provide, mainly due to problems separating out effects of local population dynamics, demographic stochasticity and dispersal that also influence the spatial scaling of population processes. Here we generalize the Moran effect by decomposing the spatial autocorrelation function for fluctuations in the size of great tit Parus major and blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus populations into components due to spatial correlations in the environmental noise, local dif...
Spatially-separated populations often exhibit positively correlated fluctuations in abundance and ot...
Environmental variation in time and space generates complex patterns in the spatial structure of tem...
<div><p>Understanding temporal variability in population size is important for conservation biology ...
The world is spatially autocorrelated. Both abiotic and biotic properties are more similar among nei...
There is considerable debate over the relative importance of dispersal and environ-mental disturbanc...
Population synchrony over various geographical scales is known from a large number of taxa. Three ma...
The recent interest in the spatial structure and dynamics of populations motivated numerous theoreti...
Spatial synchrony, the tendency for populations across space to show correlated fluctuations, is a f...
Understanding how stochastic fluctuations in the environment influence population dynamics is crucia...
Many species exhibit widespread spatial synchrony in population fluctuations. This pattern is of gre...
Many species from diverse taxa are known to display synchronous fluctuations across vast geographica...
Synchrony in population fluctuations has been identified as an important component of population dyn...
All natural populations fluctuate in space and time. These fluctuations are a result of internal dyn...
Spatially-separated populations often exhibit positively correlated fluctuations in abundance and ot...
A major debate in ecology concerns the relative importance of intrinsic factors and extrinsic enviro...
Spatially-separated populations often exhibit positively correlated fluctuations in abundance and ot...
Environmental variation in time and space generates complex patterns in the spatial structure of tem...
<div><p>Understanding temporal variability in population size is important for conservation biology ...
The world is spatially autocorrelated. Both abiotic and biotic properties are more similar among nei...
There is considerable debate over the relative importance of dispersal and environ-mental disturbanc...
Population synchrony over various geographical scales is known from a large number of taxa. Three ma...
The recent interest in the spatial structure and dynamics of populations motivated numerous theoreti...
Spatial synchrony, the tendency for populations across space to show correlated fluctuations, is a f...
Understanding how stochastic fluctuations in the environment influence population dynamics is crucia...
Many species exhibit widespread spatial synchrony in population fluctuations. This pattern is of gre...
Many species from diverse taxa are known to display synchronous fluctuations across vast geographica...
Synchrony in population fluctuations has been identified as an important component of population dyn...
All natural populations fluctuate in space and time. These fluctuations are a result of internal dyn...
Spatially-separated populations often exhibit positively correlated fluctuations in abundance and ot...
A major debate in ecology concerns the relative importance of intrinsic factors and extrinsic enviro...
Spatially-separated populations often exhibit positively correlated fluctuations in abundance and ot...
Environmental variation in time and space generates complex patterns in the spatial structure of tem...
<div><p>Understanding temporal variability in population size is important for conservation biology ...