Population and evolutionary dynamics in spatially structured seasonally varying environments
Authored by Calvin Dytham, Justin MJ Travis, Jane M Reid, Francis Daunt, Sarah J Burthe, Sarah Wanless
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12409
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Increasingly imperative objectives in ecology are to understand and
forecast population dynamic and evolutionary responses to seasonal
environmental variation and change. Such population and evolutionary
dynamics result from immediate and lagged responses of all key
life-history traits, and resulting demographic rates that affect
population growth rate, to seasonal environmental conditions and
population density. However, existing population dynamic and
eco-evolutionary theory and models have not yet fully encompassed
within-individual and among-individual variation, covariation, structure
and heterogeneity, and ongoing evolution, in a critical life-history
trait that allows individuals to respond to seasonal environmental
conditions: seasonal migration. Meanwhile, empirical studies aided by
new animal-tracking technologies are increasingly demonstrating
substantial within-population variation in the occurrence and form of
migration versus year-round residence, generating diverse forms of
`partial migration' spanning diverse species, habitats and spatial
scales. Such partially migratory systems form a continuum between the
extreme scenarios of full migration and full year-round residence, and
are commonplace in nature.
Here, we first review basic scenarios of partial migration and
associated models designed to identify conditions that facilitate the
maintenance of migratory polymorphism. We highlight that such models
have been fundamental to the development of partial migration theory,
but are spatially and demographically simplistic compared to the rich
bodies of population dynamic theory and models that consider spatially
structured populations with dispersal but no migration, or consider
populations experiencing strong seasonality and full obligate migration.
Second, to provide an overarching conceptual framework for
spatio-temporal population dynamics, we define a `partially migratory
meta-population' system as a spatially structured set of locations that
can be occupied by different sets of resident and migrant individuals in
different seasons, and where locations that can support reproduction can
also be linked by dispersal. We outline key forms of within-individual
and among-individual variation and structure in migration that could
arise within such systems and interact with variation in individual
survival, reproduction and dispersal to create complex population
dynamics and evolutionary responses across locations, seasons, years and
generations. Third, we review approaches by which population dynamic and
eco-evolutionary models could be developed to test hypotheses regarding
the dynamics and persistence of partially migratory meta-populations
given diverse forms of seasonal environmental variation and change, and
to forecast system-specific dynamics. To demonstrate one such approach,
we use an evolutionary individual-based model to illustrate that
multiple forms of partial migration can readily co-exist in a simple
spatially structured landscape. Finally, we summarise recent empirical
studies that demonstrate key components of demographic structure in
partial migration, and demonstrate diverse associations with
reproduction and survival. We thereby identify key theoretical and
empirical knowledge gaps that remain, and consider multiple
complementary approaches by which these gaps can be filled in order to
elucidate population dynamic and eco-evolutionary responses to
spatio-temporal seasonal environmental variation and change.
Tags
Movement ecology
Climate-change
Life-history
Plasticity
Density-dependence
Eco-evolutionary dynamics
Population viability
Plant-populations
Avian migration
Movement behavior
Life-history variation
Temporary emigration
Demographic structure
Meta-population
Partial
migration
Seasonal migrant
Vital
rate
Partially migratory population
Annual-cycle
Breeding grounds