Mate search and mate-finding Allee effect: on modeling mating in sex-structured population models
Authored by Ludek Berec
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1007/s12080-017-0361-0
Sponsors:
Czech Science Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Many demographic and other factors are sex-specific. To assess their
impacts on population dynamics, we need sex-structured models. Such
models have been shown to produce results different from those predicted
by asexual models, yet need to explicitly consider mating dynamics.
Modeling mating is challenging and no generally accepted formulation
exists. Mating is often impaired at low densities due to difficulties of
individuals in locating mates, a phenomenon termed a mate-finding Allee
effect. Widely applied models of this Allee effect assume either that
only male density determines the rate at which females mate or that male
and female densities are equal. Contrarily, when detailed models of
mating dynamics are sometimes developed, the female mating rate is
rarely reported, making quantification of the mate-finding Allee effect
difficult. Here, we develop an individual-based model of mating dynamics
that accounts for spatial search of one sex for another, and quantify
the rate at which females mate, depending on male and female densities
and under a number of reasonable mating scenarios. We find that this
rate increases with male and female densities (hence observing a
mate-finding Allee effect), in a decelerating or sigmoid way, that
mating can be most efficient at either low or high female densities, and
that the mate search rate may undergo density-dependent selection. We
also show that mate search trajectories evolve to be as straight as
possible when targets are sedentary, yet that when targets move the
search can be less straight without seriously affecting the female
mating rate. Some recommendations for modeling two-sex population
dynamics are also provided.
Tags
Evolution
Dynamics
selection
Dispersal
insects
time
Prey
Success
Extinction
Reproduction
Random-walk
Density-dependent selection
Allee effect
Correlated random walk
Mating behavior
Two-sex population model