On the evolution of conditional dispersal under environmental and demographic stochasticity
Authored by L A Bach, J Ripa, P Lundberg
Date Published: 2007
Sponsors:
Danish Natural Sciences Research Council
Swedish Research Council
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Questions: How will density-dependent and costly dispersal evolve in
populations subject to local density regulation and environmental
stochasticity? What type of density response will evolve, a strong
threshold type response or a soft response gradually increasing
dispersal?
Method: An individual-based model including density dependence, environmental fluctuations, and population variation was used to
simulate evolution of dispersal behaviour.
Key assumptions and variables: Individuals can assess the instantaneous
difference between habitat densities and base their dispersal behaviour
thereon. However, future density and thus future quality of a chosen
habitat patch remain uncertain due to behavioural variation and density
fluctuations. Local density regulation was given by the Beverton-Holt
map, affected by stochastic environmental forcing. An individual's
dispersal decision is a sigmoid function of the density ratio between
patch densities. The half-saturation point and steepness of the
dispersal reaction norm were allowed to evolve.
Conclusions: Conditional dispersal evolves from a state of random
behaviour, yet we do not observe threshold dispersal as the evolutionary
endpoint (as found in previous models). Among a heterogeneous set of
dispersal strategies, the most successful respond softly to density
differences but require a large density advantage to trigger emigration.
Although threshold dispersal might be evolutionarily stable, we propose
that such an endpoint may not be attainable if the evolutionary
trajectory becomes less affected by selection and more by drift. The
variability in dispersal behaviour within populations leads to
unpredictability in the potential benefit of dispersal and hence may
select for conservative emigration criteria. Other evolving life-history
traits, such as phenological traits, subject to density- and
frequency-dependent effects may show similar evolutionary patterns.
Tags
Density-dependent dispersal
Metapopulation
Model
fitness
Rates
Strategies
Cost
Kin competition