2015
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.12382
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When anthropogenic‐related disturbances overwhelm demographic persistence mechanisms

Abstract: Summary1. Population decline is associated with increased vulnerability to extinction, but also with possible density-, frequency-or distance-related 'rarity advantages' that increase recruitment success as individuals become isolated from their congeners. Distinguishing between these alternatives (risk vs. recovery of rare populations via demographic processes) has become critical, given how anthropogenic disturbances are causing population declines globally. 2. Here, we demonstrate how distance-related rarit… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 54 publications
(99 reference statements)
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“…In Mediterranean and other fire-prone ecosystems, which occupy~40% of terrestrial habitats world-wide (Bond, Woodward & Midgley 2005), human disturbances have been increasingly replacing or interacting with natural fire disturbances in the last century (Turner 2010;Duwyn & MacDougall 2015;Tye et al 2016). Our study suggests a more effective conservation management of fire-adapted seeder species by combining different disturbance regimes, rather than substituting human disturbances for fire (Fuhlendorf et al 2009;Fernandes et al 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 83%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In Mediterranean and other fire-prone ecosystems, which occupy~40% of terrestrial habitats world-wide (Bond, Woodward & Midgley 2005), human disturbances have been increasingly replacing or interacting with natural fire disturbances in the last century (Turner 2010;Duwyn & MacDougall 2015;Tye et al 2016). Our study suggests a more effective conservation management of fire-adapted seeder species by combining different disturbance regimes, rather than substituting human disturbances for fire (Fuhlendorf et al 2009;Fernandes et al 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…In Mediterranean and other fire‐prone ecosystems, which occupy ~40% of terrestrial habitats world‐wide (Bond, Woodward & Midgley ), human disturbances have been increasingly replacing or interacting with natural fire disturbances in the last century (Turner ; Duwyn & MacDougall ; Tye et al . ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rare species are generally assumed to be more sensitive to human perturbations than abundant, common, or broadly distributed species (Gaston 1994, Manne and Pimm 2001, Dawson et al. 2012, Duwyn and MacDougall 2015). The sensitivity of rare species is often attributed to having a narrower niche, more conservative resource acquisition, or a slower growth rate relative to their neighbors (Grime 1977, Rabinowitz 1981, Rabinowitz et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, determining which species will be adversely affected by global change is challenging because shifts in abundance and extinctions arise not only from altered environmental conditions, but also from stochastic events (Shoemaker et al 2020). Rare species are generally assumed to be more sensitive to human perturbations than abundant, common, or broadly distributed species (Gaston 1994, Manne and Pimm 2001, Dawson et al 2012, Duwyn and MacDougall 2015. The sensitivity of rare species is often attributed to having a narrower niche, more conservative resource acquisition, or a slower growth rate relative to their neighbors (Grime 1977, Rabinowitz 1981, Rabinowitz et al 1984, Reich et al 1999.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Throughout the world, an increasing number of trees species are reported to be declining in abundance (Allen et al, 2010;Cohen et al, 2016;van Mantgem et al, 2009;Millar & Stephenson, 2015;Trumbore, Brando, & Hartmann, 2015). In many cases, this decline is due to increased mortality of established trees, whereas in other cases it involves reduced recruitment, with younger trees being either less abundant or failing to reach the adult stage (Duwyn & MacDougall, 2015;Fei, Kong, Steiner, Moser, & Steiner, 2011;Gibbons et al, 2008;Kueppers, Snyder, Sloan, Zavaleta, & Fulfrost, 2005;Manning, Fischer, & Lindenmayer, 2006). Understanding the patterns of tree decline and their drivers is of great importance given that forests, woodlands, and savannas cover 30% of the world's terrestrial landscapes (FAO, 2006) and have major influences on ecological systems, including carbon sequestration, water purification, and habitat provisioning (Trumbore et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%