2020
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.6239
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Relationships between survival and habitat suitability of semi‐aquatic mammals

Abstract: Spatial distribution and habitat selection are integral to the study of animal ecology. Habitat selection may optimize the fitness of individuals. Hutchinsonian niche theory posits the fundamental niche of species would support the persistence or growth of populations. Although niche‐based species distribution models (SDMs) and habitat suitability models (HSMs) such as maximum entropy (Maxent) have demonstrated fair to excellent predictive power, few studies have linked the prediction of HSMs to demographic ra… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Because our results suggest that fitness-centre correlations across multiple species are normally distributed around the zero, restricting the analysis to only few species makes the hypothesis more likely to be supported by chance alone (Santini et al 2019). Thus, while positive fitness-centre associations are clear for certain species, these may simply not hold true in other species (Thuiller et al 2010, Pellissier et al 2013 or even show a negative relationship (Barela et al 2020). Indeed, our analysis did not detect an effect of speciesspecific traits (dispersal ability and climatic breadth) on the fitness-centre relationship, suggesting that correlations are randomly distributed across ecologically different species.…”
Section: Why the Fitness-centre Hypothesis May Not Holdmentioning
confidence: 75%
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“…Because our results suggest that fitness-centre correlations across multiple species are normally distributed around the zero, restricting the analysis to only few species makes the hypothesis more likely to be supported by chance alone (Santini et al 2019). Thus, while positive fitness-centre associations are clear for certain species, these may simply not hold true in other species (Thuiller et al 2010, Pellissier et al 2013 or even show a negative relationship (Barela et al 2020). Indeed, our analysis did not detect an effect of speciesspecific traits (dispersal ability and climatic breadth) on the fitness-centre relationship, suggesting that correlations are randomly distributed across ecologically different species.…”
Section: Why the Fitness-centre Hypothesis May Not Holdmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…The fitness-centre hypothesis has been detected for certain species in previous studies (Nagaraju et al 2013, Wittmann et al 2016, Sangüesa-Barreda et al 2018, Mammola et al 2019 but not in others (Larson et al 2010, Barela et al 2020, Chardon et al 2020. However, these studies show three main methodological limitations (which we will discuss in detail below).…”
Section: Why the Fitness-centre Hypothesis May Not Holdmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Recent theoretical and experimental efforts have highlighted the relevance of various individual movement modes, for example, searching (Auger-Méthé et al, 2015;Chakravarty et al, 2019), patch use, and giving-up behaviors (Brown, 1988;Charnov, 1976;Davidson & Hady, 2019). Studies of animal movement have become more frequent in recent years, emphasizing the conceptual significance of space use behavior (Barela et al, 2020;Nathan et al, 2008;Potts et al, 2014). Nevertheless, gaining insight into the motivations and limitations of individual behavior is still a major challenge in empirical studies (Froy et al, 2018), with implications for theoretical development (Stevens, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Maximum entropy (MaxEnt) is a SDM with good simulation accuracy [14]. It has been widely used to predict habitats for endangered species, invasive species, and marine animals [15][16][17][18].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%