2012
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.446
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Functional endemism: population connectivity, shifting baselines, and the scale of human experience

Abstract: Quantifying population connectivity is important for visualizing the spatial and temporal scales that conservation measures act upon. Traditionally, migration based on genetic data has been reported in migrants per generation. However, the temporal scales over which this migration may occur do not necessarily accommodate the scales over which human perturbations occur, leaving the potential for a disconnect between population genetic data and conservation action based on those data. Here, we present a new metr… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 78 publications
(123 reference statements)
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“…While the fields of genetics and more recently genomics [10] have proved invaluable for understanding population structure and connectivity of marine mammals over historical time scales, limitations exist for interpreting contemporary movement and connectivity patterns using these methods. Using additional methods that can contribute behavioural and/or environmental information at a higher temporal resolution can prove beneficial for informing conservation and management decisions [11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the fields of genetics and more recently genomics [10] have proved invaluable for understanding population structure and connectivity of marine mammals over historical time scales, limitations exist for interpreting contemporary movement and connectivity patterns using these methods. Using additional methods that can contribute behavioural and/or environmental information at a higher temporal resolution can prove beneficial for informing conservation and management decisions [11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our piece, we aim to use the fascinating observational and experimental work performed by Wismer et al as an entry point into how learned behaviors could potentially join biogeography and behavior as mechanisms explaining the observed diversity of reef fish population structure. Over the past 15 yr, a body of work has emerged suggesting that marine species which were previously considered geographically widespread are actually groups of closely related and range restricted species (Terry et al 2000;Colborn et al 2001;Taylor & Hellberg 2005;Drew et al 2008Drew et al , 2010DiBattista et al 2011DiBattista et al , 2012Drew & Kaufman 2012;Liu et al 2012;Bernardi 2013). We now know that the evolutionary mosaic of marine species is much more finely partitioned and that factors such as local ecological conditions can play a major role in the evolutionary history of fishes (Rocha et al 2005;Dawson 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%