A model for range expansion of coastal algal species with different dispersal strategies: the case of Fucus serratus in northern Spain
Authored by J Arrontes
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.3354/meps295057
Sponsors:
European Union
Spanish Ministries
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A model was used to investigate the nature of the distributional
boundary of the brown alga Fucus serratus in northern Spain. The model
explored the colonisation of a shore by invaders with contrasting
dispersal modes: an exponentially bounded mode, as an example of
short-range dispersal; an extreme, long-range dispersal mode; and a
mixed mode with variable proportions of short- and long-distance
dispersers. The organisms were dioecious, had a limited life-span and
reproduced only when plants of different sexes were within a short
distance. For species with exponentially bounded dispersal and
interannual variability in the environment, the model reproduced the
basic features of the distribution of F serratus: survival and
reproduction beyond the distributional boundary, sharp boundary and
displacements of the boundary through time. Species with exclusively
long-range dispersal exhibited continually accelerating rates of spread
under favourable conditions. However, long-range dispersers might fail
to invade or become extinct when exposed to a short series of
unfavourable years. Regional abundance is critical for the persistence
of local populations. For long-range dispersers, no distinct
distributional boundary was recognised. At the opposite extreme, invaders with exponentially bounded dispersal had small and decelerating
rates of spread, high resistance to disturbances and distinct
distributional boundaries; the persistence of populations mainly relies
upon local abundance. Mixed strategies, with most of the propagules
having exponentially bounded dispersal and a small fraction having
long-range dispersal, appear to be the superior strategy; they combine
rapid colonisation rates and high resistance to disturbances. The
combination of Allee effects and propagule pressure (i.e. number of
propagules arriving at a given locality) explains the differences among
dispersal strategies.
Tags
patterns
invasion
Temperature
Population-growth
Spread
Invading organisms
Muticum yendo fensholt
Asturian
coast
Sargassum
Boundaries