Dispersal variability and associated population-level consequences in tree-killing bark beetles
Authored by Markus Kautz, Reinhard Schopf, Muhammad Ali Imron, Kai Dworschak
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1186/s40462-016-0074-9
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://static-content.springer.com/esm/art%3A10.1186%2Fs40462-016-0074-9/MediaObjects/40462_2016_74_MOESM2_ESM.nlogo
Abstract
Background: Dispersal is a key process in the response of insect
populations to rapidly changing environmental conditions. Variability
among individuals, regarding the timing of dispersal initiation and
travelled distance from source, is assumed to contribute to increased
population success through risk spreading. However, experiments are
often limited in studying complex dispersal interactions over space and
time. By applying a local-scaled individual-based simulation model we
studied dispersal and emerging infestation patterns in a host - bark
beetle system (Picea abies - Ips typgraphus). More specifically, we (i)
investigated the effect of individual variability in beetle physiology
(flight capacity) and environmental heterogeneity (host susceptibility
level) on population-level dispersal success, and (ii) elucidated
patterns of spatial and/or temporal variability in individual dispersal
success, host selectivity, and the resulting beetle density within
colonized hosts in differently susceptible environments.
Results: Individual variability in flight capacity of bark beetles
causes predominantly positive effects on population-level dispersal
success, yet these effects are strongly environment-dependent:
Variability is most beneficial in purely resistant habitats, while
positive effects are less pronounced in purely susceptible habitats, and
largely absent in habitats where host susceptibility is spatially
scattered. Despite success rates being highest in purely susceptible
habitats, scattered host susceptibility appeared most suitable for
dispersing bark beetle populations as it ensures population spread
without drastically reducing success rates. At the individual level, dispersal success generally decreases with distance to source and is
lowest in early flight cohorts, while host selectivity increased and
colonization density decreased with increasing distance across all
environments.
Conclusions: Our modelling approach is demonstrated to be a powerful
tool for studying movement ecology in bark beetles. Dispersal
variability largely contributes to risk spreading among individuals, and
facilitates the response of populations to changing environmental
conditions. Higher mortality risk suffered by a small part of the
dispersing population (long-distance dispersers, pioneers) is likely
paid off by reduced deferred costs resulting in fitness benefits for
subsequent generations. Both, dispersal variability in space and time, and environmental heterogeneity are characterized as key features which
require particular emphasis when investigating dispersal and infestation
patterns in tree-killing bark beetles.
Tags
Climate-change
Mountain pine-beetle
Ips-typographus l
Douglas-fir beetle
Dendroctonus-ponderosae
Mark-recapture experiments
Host selection
Colonization behavior
Pheromone production
Individual
variation