Why are metapopulations so rare?
Authored by Hans Joachim Poethke, Emanuel A Fronhofer, Alexander Kubisch, Thomas Hovestadt, Frank M Hilker
Date Published: 2012
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Roughly 40 years after its introduction, the metapopulation concept is
central to population ecology. The notion that local populations and
their dynamics may be coupled by dispersal is without any doubt of great
importance for our understanding of population-level processes.
A metapopulation describes a set of subpopulations linked by (rare)
dispersal events in a dynamic equilibrium of extinctions and
recolonizations. In the large body of literature that has accumulated, the term ``metapopulation'' is often used in a very broad sense; most of
the time it simply implies spatial heterogeneity. A number of reviews
have recently addressed this problem and have pointed out that, despite
the large and still growing popularity of the metapopulation concept, there are only very few empirical examples that conform with the strict
classical metapopulation (CM) definition.
In order to understand this discrepancy between theory and observation, we use an individual-based modeling approach that allows us to pinpoint
the environmental conditions and the life-history attributes required
for the emergence of a CM structure. We find that CM dynamics are
restricted to a specific parameter range at the border between spatially
structured but completely occupied and globally extinct populations.
Considering general life-history attributes, our simulations suggest
that CMs are more likely to occur in arthropod species than in (large)
vertebrates.
Since the specific type of spatial population structure determines
conservation concepts, our findings have important implications for
conservation biology. Our model suggests that most spatially structured
populations are panmictic, patchy, or of mainland-island type, which
makes efforts spent on increasing connectivity (e.g., corridors)
questionable. If one does observe a true CM structure, this means that
the focal metapopulation is on the brink of extinction and that drastic
conservation measures are needed.
Tags
Evolution
Genetic diversity
Density-dependent dispersal
Long-term dynamics
Local extinction
Reproductive effort
Individual-based simulations
Single-species populations
Fragmented landscape
Range
limits