Fitness declines towards range limits and local adaptation to climate affect dispersal evolution during climate-induced range shifts
Authored by A L Hargreaves, S F Bailey, R A Laird
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12669
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.g7641
Abstract
Dispersal ability will largely determine whether species track their
climatic niches during climate change, a process especially important
for populations at contracting (low-latitude/low-elevation) range limits
that otherwise risk extinction. We investigate whether dispersal
evolution at contracting range limits is facilitated by two processes
that potentially enable edge populations to experience and adjust to the
effects of climate deterioration before they cause extinction: (i)
climate-induced fitness declines towards range limits and (ii) local
adaptation to a shifting climate gradient. We simulate a species
distributed continuously along a temperature gradient using a spatially
explicit, individual-based model. We compare range-wide dispersal
evolution during climate stability vs. directional climate change, with
uniform fitness vs. fitness that declines towards range limits (RLs), and for a single climate genotype vs. multiple genotypes locally adapted
to temperature. During climate stability, dispersal decreased towards
RLs when fitness was uniform, but increased when fitness declined
towards RLs, due to highly dispersive genotypes maintaining sink
populations at RLs, increased kin selection in smaller populations, and
an emergent fitness asymmetry that favoured dispersal in low-quality
habitat. However, this initial dispersal advantage at low-fitness RLs
did not facilitate climate tracking, as it was outweighed by an
increased probability of extinction. Locally adapted genotypes benefited
from staying close to their climate optima; this selected against
dispersal under stable climates but for increased dispersal throughout
shifting ranges, compared to cases without local adaptation. Dispersal
increased at expanding RLs in most scenarios, but only increased at the
range centre and contracting RLs given local adaptation to climate.
Tags
Competition
Density-dependent dispersal
Seed dispersal
Habitats
Strategies
Expansion
Species range
Margins
Coast dune plant
Invasive
plant