Environmental unpredictability and inbreeding depression select for mixed dispersal syndromes
Authored by Jorge Hidalgo, de Casas Rafael Rubio, Miguel A Munoz
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1186/s12862-016-0638-8
Sponsors:
European Union
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Mixed dispersal syndromes have historically been regarded as
a bet-hedging mechanism that enhances survivorship in unpredictable
environments, ensuring that some propagules stay in the maternal
environment while others can potentially colonize new sites. However, this entails paying the costs of both dispersal and non-dispersal.
Propagules that disperse are likely to encounter unfavorable conditions, while non-dispersing propagules might form inbred populations of close
relatives. Here, we investigate the conditions under which mixed
dispersal syndromes emerge and are evolutionarily stable, taking into
account the risks of both environmental unpredictability and inbreeding.
Results: Using mathematical and computational modeling, we show that
high dispersal propensity is favored whenever environmental
unpredictability is low and inbreeding depression high, whereas mixed
dispersal syndromes are adaptive under high environmental
unpredictability, more particularly if inbreeding depression is small.
Although pure dispersal is frequently adaptive, mixed dispersal
represents the optimal strategy under many different parameterizations
of our models, indicating that this strategy is likely to be favored in
a wide variety of contexts. Furthermore, monomorphic populations go
inevitably extinct when environmental and genetic costs are high, whilst
mixed strategies can maintain viable populations even under very extreme
conditions.
Conclusions: Our models support the hypothesis that the interplay
between inbreeding depression and environmental unpredictability shapes
dispersal syndromes, often resulting in mixed strategies. Moreover, mixed dispersal seems to facilitate persistence whenever conditions are
critical or nearly critical for survival.
Tags
Evolution
ecology
Seed dispersal
Maintenance
Habitats
Consequences
History
Plants