Dispersal distance is understudied although the evolution of dispersal distance affects the distribution of genetic diversity through space. Using the two-spotted spider mite, Tetranychus urticae, we tested the conditions under which dispersal distance could evolve. To this aim, we performed artificial selection based on dispersal distance by choosing 40 individuals (out of 150) that settled furthest from the home patch (high dispersal, HDIS) and 40 individuals that remained close to the home patch (low dispersal, LDIS) with three replicates per treatment. We did not observe a response to selection nor a difference between treatments in life-history traits (fecundity, survival, longevity, and sex-ratio) after ten generations of selection. H...
Dispersal and competition have both been suggested to drive variation in adaptability to a new envir...
Dispersal evolution impacts the fluxes of individuals and hence, connectivity in metapopulations. Co...
In group living, species spatial distribution results from responses to environmental heterogeneity ...
Dispersal distance is understudied although the evolution of dispersal distance affects the distribu...
Dispersal distance is understudied although the evolution of dispersal distance affects the distribu...
Dispersal, the movement of individuals leading to gene flow, is a life-history trait found in virtua...
Dispersal to new hosts is an important process for an invasive herbivore, such as the two-spotted sp...
Non-genetic transmission of information across generations, so-called parental effects, can have sig...
Although dispersal distance plays a major role in determining whether organisms will reach new habit...
During range expansion, the most dispersive individuals make up the range front, and assortative mat...
During range expansion, the most dispersive individuals make up the range front, and assortative mat...
Dispersal is a central process to almost all species on earth, as it connects spatially structured p...
Dispersal is a central process to almost all species on earth, as it connects spatially structured p...
Dispersal is an inseparable feature of animal life and a major determinant of species distributions ...
Dispersal is essential for population persistence in transient environments. While costs of dispersa...
Dispersal and competition have both been suggested to drive variation in adaptability to a new envir...
Dispersal evolution impacts the fluxes of individuals and hence, connectivity in metapopulations. Co...
In group living, species spatial distribution results from responses to environmental heterogeneity ...
Dispersal distance is understudied although the evolution of dispersal distance affects the distribu...
Dispersal distance is understudied although the evolution of dispersal distance affects the distribu...
Dispersal, the movement of individuals leading to gene flow, is a life-history trait found in virtua...
Dispersal to new hosts is an important process for an invasive herbivore, such as the two-spotted sp...
Non-genetic transmission of information across generations, so-called parental effects, can have sig...
Although dispersal distance plays a major role in determining whether organisms will reach new habit...
During range expansion, the most dispersive individuals make up the range front, and assortative mat...
During range expansion, the most dispersive individuals make up the range front, and assortative mat...
Dispersal is a central process to almost all species on earth, as it connects spatially structured p...
Dispersal is a central process to almost all species on earth, as it connects spatially structured p...
Dispersal is an inseparable feature of animal life and a major determinant of species distributions ...
Dispersal is essential for population persistence in transient environments. While costs of dispersa...
Dispersal and competition have both been suggested to drive variation in adaptability to a new envir...
Dispersal evolution impacts the fluxes of individuals and hence, connectivity in metapopulations. Co...
In group living, species spatial distribution results from responses to environmental heterogeneity ...