Evolution of body condition-dependent dispersal in metapopulations
Authored by D Bonte, la Pena E de
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01737.x
Sponsors:
Flanders Research Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Body condition-dependent dispersal strategies are common in nature.
Although it is obvious that environmental constraints may induce a
positive relationship between body condition and dispersal, it is not
clear whether positive body conditional dispersal strategies may evolve
as a strategy in metapopulations. We have developed an individual-based
simulation model to investigate how body condition-dispersal reaction
norms evolve in metapopulations that are characterized by different
levels of environmental stochasticity and dispersal mortality. In the
model, body condition is related to fecundity and determined either by
environmental conditions during juvenile development (adult dispersal)
or by those experienced by the mother (natal dispersal). Evolutionarily
stable reaction norms strongly depend on metapopulation conditions:
positive body condition dependency of dispersal evolved in
metapopulation conditions with low levels of dispersal mortality and
high levels of environmental stochasticity. Negative body
condition-dependent dispersal evolved in metapopulations with high
dispersal mortality and low environmental stochasticity. The latter
strategy is responsible for higher dispersal rates under kin competition
when dispersal decisions are based on body condition reached at the
adult life stage. The evolution of both positive and negative body
condition-dependent dispersal strategies is consequently likely in
metapopulations and depends on the prevalent environmental conditions.
Tags
Individual-based model
population
Predator
Density-dependence
Natal dispersal
Kin competition
Male-killing endosymbionts
Postfledging dispersal
Common
lizard
Wolf spider