Fine-Grained Distribution of a Non-Native Resource Can Alter the Population Dynamics of a Native Consumer
Authored by Mifuyu Nakajima, Carol L Boggs
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143052
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Platforms:
Mathematica
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
New interactions with non-native species can alter selection pressures
on native species. Here, we examined the effect of the spatial
distribution of a non-native species, a factor that determines
ecological and evolutionary outcomes but that is poorly understood, particularly on a fine scale. Specifically, we explored a native
butterfly population and a non-native plant on which the butterfly
oviposits despite the plant's toxicity to larvae. We developed an
individual-based model to describe movement and oviposition behaviors of
each butterfly, which were determined by plant distribution and the
butterfly's host preference genotype. We estimated the parameter values
of the model from rich field data. We simulated various patterns of
plant distributions and compared the rates of butterfly population
growth and changes in the allele frequency of oviposition preference.
Neither the number nor mean area of patches of non-native species
affected the butterfly population, whereas plant abundance, patch shape, and distance to the nearest native and non-native patches altered both
the population dynamics and genetics. Furthermore, we found a dramatic
decrease in population growth rates when we reduced the distance to the
nearest native patch from 147 m to 136 m. Thus changes in the non-native
resource distribution that are critical to the fate of the native
herbivore could only be detected at a fine-grained scale that matched
the scale of a female butterfly's movement. In addition, we found that
the native butterfly population was unlikely to be rescued by the
exclusion of the allele for acceptance of the non-native plant as a
host. This study thus highlights the importance of including both
ecological and evolutionary dynamics in analyses of the outcome of
species interactions and provides insights into habitat management for
non-native species.
Tags
Evolution
models
Coevolution
Dispersal
invasion
Extinction
Landscapes
World
Genetics
Pierid butterflies