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Dispersal Book

Dispersal
Dispersal, Habitat fragmentation and global climate change are the two major environmental threats to the persistence of species and ecosystems. The probability of a species surviving such changes is strongly dependent on its ability to track shifts in the environme, Dispersal has a rating of 4 stars
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Dispersal, Habitat fragmentation and global climate change are the two major environmental threats to the persistence of species and ecosystems. The probability of a species surviving such changes is strongly dependent on its ability to track shifts in the environme, Dispersal
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  • Dispersal
  • Written by author Jean Clobert
  • Published by Oxford University Press, USA, May 2001
  • Habitat fragmentation and global climate change are the two major environmental threats to the persistence of species and ecosystems. The probability of a species surviving such changes is strongly dependent on its ability to track shifts in the environme
  • Habitat fragmentation and global climate change are the two major environmental threats to the persistence of species and ecosystems. The probability of a species surviving such changes is strongly dependent on its ability to track shifts in the environme
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Authors

Foreword
List of contributors
Introduction
Pt. IMeasures of dispersal: genetic and demographic approaches
1Methods for estimating dispersal probabilities and related parameters using marked animals3
2Genetic approaches to the estimation of dispersal rates18
3How to measure dispersal: the genetic approach. The example of fire ants29
4Dispersal in pikas (Ochotona princeps): combining genetic and demographic approaches to reveal spatial and temporal patterns43
5Invasion fitness and adaptive dynamics in spatial population models57
Pt. IIWhy disperse? Habitat variability, intraspecific interactions, multi-determinism, and interspecfic interactions
6On the relationship between the ideal free distribution and the evolution of dispersal83
7The landscape context of dispersal96
8Dispersal, intraspecific competition, kin competition and kin facilitation: a review of the empirical evidence110
9Inbreeding, kinship, and the evolution of natal dispersal123
10Inbreeding versus outbreeding in captive and wild populations of naked mole-rats143
11Multiple causes of the evolution of dispersal155
12Parasitism and predation as causes of dispersal168
12aDispersal and parasitism169
12bThe effects of predation on dispersal180
Pt. IIIMechanisms of dispersal: genetically based dispersal, condition-dependent dispersal, and dispersal cues
13The genetic basis of dispersal and migration, and its consequences for the evolution of correlated traits191
14Condition-dependent dispersal203
15Proximate mechanisms of natal dispersal: the role of body condition and hormones217
16Habitat selection by dispersers: integrating proximate and ultimate approaches230
17Public information and breeding habital selection243
Pt. IVDispersal from the individual to the ecosystem level: individuals, populations, species, and communities
18Dispersal, individual phenotype, and phenotypic plasticity261
19Dispersal and the genetic properties of metapopulations273
20Population dynamic consequences of dispersal in local populations and in metapopulations283
21Dispersal in antagonistic interactions299
22The properties of competitive communities with coupled local and regional dynamics311
Pt. VPerspectives
23The evolutionary consequences of gene flow and local adaptation: future approaches329
24Perspectives on the study of dispersal evolution341
25Dispersal in theory and practice: consequences for conservation biology358
References373
Index443


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