Publication: Relative importance of population processes and habitat characteristics in determining site occupancy of two anurans
Relative importance of population processes and habitat characteristics in determining site occupancy of two anurans
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Schmidt, B. R., & et al. (2005). Relative importance of population processes and habitat characteristics in determining site occupancy of two anurans. Journal of Wildlife Management, 69(3), 884–893. https://doi.org/10.2193/0022-541x(2005)069[0884:rioppa]2.0.co;2
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The ecological niche is the conceptual foundation for the analysis of species distributions. Habitat variables and resources are therefore thought to determine the distribution of a species. However, metapopulation and source‐sink models posit that population processes determine the local distribution of a species; metapopulation theory suggests that many suitable patches could be unoccupied and source‐sink theory suggests that unsuitable patches could be occupied. We examined whether the distribution of 2 European anurans (tree frog
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Schmidt, B. R., & et al. (2005). Relative importance of population processes and habitat characteristics in determining site occupancy of two anurans. Journal of Wildlife Management, 69(3), 884–893. https://doi.org/10.2193/0022-541x(2005)069[0884:rioppa]2.0.co;2