Dispersal asymmetries and deleterious mutations influence metapopulation persistence and range dynamics
Authored by Justin MJ Travis, Roslyn C Henry, Aurelie Coulon
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1007/s10682-015-9777-4
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Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Abstract
Asymmetric dispersal within and between populations is more often the
norm than the exception. For example, prevailing winds and currents can
result in directional dispersal of many passively dispersed species and
inter-individual variability in physical condition can generate
asymmetric dispersal rates between individuals and populations. Despite
this, very little theory incorporates asymmetric dispersal into spatial
ecological or genetic models. We therefore present three illustrative
scenarios incorporating asymmetric dispersal into spatially and
genetically explicit individual based models. In the first, asymmetric
dispersal due to environmental forces, such as wind or currents, interacts with the accumulation of mutation load across an environmental
gradient, with consequences for range dynamics. In the second, asymmetric dispersal rates arise as individuals disperse according to
their physical condition, such that individuals carrying more mutation
load disperse less. We demonstrate that this condition-dependent
asymmetric dispersal substantially reduces metapopulation persistence.
Finally, we turn to the potential implications of condition-dependent
dispersal for range expansions. Simulations demonstrate that asymmetric
dispersal of individuals according to their load status can
substantially slow the rate of range expansion. Taken together, these
results highlight that overlooking asymmetric dispersal can result in
major biases of our estimates of species persistence and range expansion
dynamics.
Tags
evolutionary dynamics
Rates
Expansion
Load
History
Species range
Gene flow
Inbreeding depression
Butterfly
metapopulation
Body condition