Michał Jezierski

Michał Jezierski
  • DPhil Zoology
  • Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow at University of Birmingham

Island biogeographer

About

10
Publications
2,598
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51
Citations
Current institution
University of Birmingham
Current position
  • Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow

Publications

Publications (10)
Preprint
Full-text available
Predicting coevolutionary outcomes is critical for understanding the consequences of climate change and biodiversity loss. The geographic mosaic theory of coevolution posits that coevolutionary interactions vary among populations, facilitating the persistence of such interactions over evolutionary timescales. Characterisation of geographic mosaics...
Article
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Despite the role of many domestic animals as model organisms, our understanding of their undomesticated conspecifics is comparatively poor. This limits our ability to infer the eco-evolutionary context of phenomena studied in the laboratory and to explore domestication. The domestic pigeon's wild form is the Rock Dove (Columba livia). By studying 5...
Article
Full-text available
The “island syndrome” refers to similarity in the biology of island organisms, but its generality is questionable, as the scope of species and traits examined are often limited. Here, I show that birds breeding exclusively on islands (breeding island endemics) evolved smaller clutches, using a dataset of 4,530 bird species. Using an inclusive defin...
Preprint
Full-text available
Aims: Species' distributional responses to climate change can depend on ecology and phylogeny. The degree of habitat specialism is potentially important because habitat generalists with wider distributions are assumed to be less sensitive to environmental changes compared to narrowly-distributed habitat specialists. Additionally, predicting which a...
Article
Full-text available
The island syndrome is a widespread biological phenomenon that describes a suite of morphological, behavioural, demographic and life-history changes associated with island dwelling. These similar evolutionary responses among disparate groups of animals and plants represent a remarkable case of convergent evolution. Among animals, birds are a highly...
Article
Full-text available
Interactions between wild, feral, and domestic animals are of economic and conservation significance. The pigeon Columba livia is a synanthropic species in a feral form, but it also includes the rare Rock Dove. Columba livia is an important player at the wild-domestic interface, acting as a carrier of avian diseases, and the feral form threatens Ro...
Article
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Whilst many introduced non-native plants and animals become naturalised or even invasive, others fail to persist. Golden Pheasants (Chrysolophus pictus) have occurred in multiple regions outside of their native China, with the largest populations establishing in the United Kingdom. Now very rare in the UK, ongoing releases make its continued ‘wild’...
Article
Full-text available
Domesticated animals have been culturally and economically important throughout history. Many of their ancestral lineages are extinct or genetically endangered following hybridization with domesticated relatives. Consequently, they have been understudied compared to the ancestral lineages of domestic plants. The domestic pigeon Columba livia, which...
Article
Full-text available
Domestic animals have immense economic, cultural, and practical value and have played pivotal roles in the development of human civilization. Many domesticates have, among their wild relatives, undomesticated forms representative of their ancestors. Resurgent interest in these ancestral forms has highlighted the unclear genetic status of many, and...

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