2022
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16784
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Perishing rich, expanding poor: Demography and population genetic patterns in two congeneric butterflies

Abstract: In human-altered landscapes, specialist butterflies typically form spatially restricted populations, genetically differentiated due to dispersal restrictions. Generalists, in contrast, display minimum differentiation but high genetic diversity. While local-level actions suffice to conserve specialists and landscape-level actions are necessary for generalists, minimum information exists regarding conservation of species with intermediate features. We targeted two congeneric butterflies, the recently re-expandin… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Looking at the larger distance estimates for our four study species, their dispersal power was low if compared with butterfly species from Kenyan mountain forests (Habel et al, 2023), but also in comparison with temperate Central Europe (Ehl et al, 2019, Fric et al, 2010, Junker et al, 2021, Konvickova et al, 2023, Pennekamp et al, 2014, Zimmermann et al, 2005). In general, the extrapolated dispersal probabilities over larger distances based on NEFs were implausibly low in all four species and for all three distance classes used (i.e., 20, 30, 50 m), a more general fact as pointed out already by Baguette (2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
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“…Looking at the larger distance estimates for our four study species, their dispersal power was low if compared with butterfly species from Kenyan mountain forests (Habel et al, 2023), but also in comparison with temperate Central Europe (Ehl et al, 2019, Fric et al, 2010, Junker et al, 2021, Konvickova et al, 2023, Pennekamp et al, 2014, Zimmermann et al, 2005). In general, the extrapolated dispersal probabilities over larger distances based on NEFs were implausibly low in all four species and for all three distance classes used (i.e., 20, 30, 50 m), a more general fact as pointed out already by Baguette (2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…In addition, due to their high site fidelity, such species can only reach a new potential habitat with difficulty and are thus often subject to stochastic extinction processes, which occur more frequently in small and isolated populations than in large and interconnected ones (Melbourne & Hastings, 2008). Looking at the larger distance estimates for our four study species, their dispersal power was low if compared with butterfly species from Kenyan mountain forests (Habel et al, 2023), but also in comparison with temperate Central Europe (Ehl et al, 2019, Fric et al, 2010, Junker et al, 2021, Konvickova et al, 2023, Pennekamp et al, 2014, Zimmermann et al, 2005. In general, the extrapolated dispersal probabilities over larger distances based on NEFs were implausibly low in all four species and for all three distance classes used (i.e., 20, 30, 50 m), a more general fact as pointed out already by Baguette (2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
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