Schmidt, ChloéMuñoz, GabrielLancaster, Lesley T.Lessard, Jean PhilippeMarske, Katharine A.Marshall, Katie E.Garroway, Colin J.2023-06-252023-06-252022-07-25Schmidt, C, Muñoz, G, Lancaster, L T, Lessard, J P, Marske, K A, Marshall, K E & Garroway, C J 2022, 'Population demography maintains biogeographic boundaries', Ecology Letters, vol. 25, no. 8, pp. 1905-1913. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.140581461-023Xhttps://hdl.handle.net/2164/20991Funding Information: This manuscript was the result of a working group funded by a Quebec Center for Biodiversity Science grant to JPL and KEM. We thank Ben Holt and the Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate for sharing their map of mammal biogeographic regions. We thank Laura Pollock, Isaac Eckert and Federico Riva for comments on the written document and discussion of the topic. We also thank Anna Hargreaves, Brian Leung, Jonathan Belmaker, Lilian Sales and Shahar Chaikin for additional discussions. We are also grateful to the authors whose work provided the raw data for this synthesis. KEM is supported by a NSERC Discovery Grant. GM and JPL were supported by the Concordia University Research Chair in Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning. GM is additionally supported by a Concordia Graduate Fellowship. CS and CJG were supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant to CJG. CS was also supported by a U. Manitoba Graduate Fellowship, and a U. Manitoba Graduate Enhancement of Tri‐council funding grant to CJG. The authors declare no conflict of interest.93014887engbiogeographyconservationlandscape geneticsmacroecologymacroevolutionmacrogeneticsmammalsmanagementnorth and South Americapopulation geneticsG Geography. Anthropology. RecreationG Geography (General)Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and SystematicsSupplementary DataGG1Population demography maintains biogeographic boundariesJournal article10.1111/ele.14058http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85132733508&partnerID=8YFLogxK258