Spatial Synchrony in Population Dynamics
US Forest Service · United States Department of Agriculture · +3 more institutions
Abstract
▪ Abstract Spatial synchrony refers to coincident changes in the abundance or other time-varying characteristics of geographically disjunct populations. This phenomenon has been documented in the dynamics of species representing a variety of taxa and ecological roles. Synchrony may arise from three primary mechanisms:(a) dispersal among populations, reducing the size of relatively large populations and increasing relatively small ones; (b) congruent dependence of population dynamics on a synchronous exogenous random factor such as temperature or rainfall, a phenomenon known as the “Moran effect”; and (c) trophic interactions with populations of other species that are themselves spatially synchronous or mobile.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 167
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Biological dispersal
- Population
- Disjunct
- Ecology
- Intraspecific competition
- Biology
- Trophic level
- Dynamics (music)
- Life in Land