Sex difference and Allee effects shape the dynamics of sex-structured invasions
Authored by Allison K Shaw, Hanna Kokko, Michael G Neubert
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12658
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.39n4g
Abstract
1. The rate at which a population grows and spreads can depend on
individual behaviour and interactions with others. In many species with
two sexes, males and females differ in key life-history traits (e.g.
growth, survival and dispersal), which can scale up to affect population
rates of growth and spread. In sexually reproducing species, the
mechanics of locating mates and reproducing successfully introduce
further complications for predicting the invasion speed (spread rate),
as both can change nonlinearly with density.
2. Most models of population spread are based on one sex, or include
limited aspects of sex differences. Here we ask whether and how the
dynamics of finding mates interact with sex-specific life-history traits
to influence the rate of population spread.
3. We present a hybrid approach for modelling invasions of populations
with two sexes that links individual-level mating behaviour (in an
individual-based model) to population-level dynamics (in an
integrodifference equationmodel).
4. We find that limiting the amount of time during which individuals can
search for mates causes a demographic Allee effect which can slow,
delay, or even prevent an invasion. Furthermore, any sex-based
asymmetries in life history or behaviour (skewed sex ratio, sex-biased
dispersal, and sex-specific mating behaviours) amplify these effects. In
contrast, allowing individuals to mate more than once ameliorates these
effects, enabling polygynandrous populations to invade under conditions
where monogamously mating populations would fail to establish.
5. We show that details of individuals' mating behaviour can impact the
rate of population spread. Based on our results, we propose a stricter
definition of a mate-finding Allee effect, which is not met by the
commonly used minimum mating function. Our modelling approach, which
links individual- and population-level dynamics in a single model, may
be useful for exploring other aspects of individual behaviour that are
thought to impact the rate of population spread.
Tags
Evolution
Demography
Dispersal
Success
Population-growth
Sensitivity-analysis
Extinction
Spatial spread
Sex-biased dispersal
Integrodifference equations
Invading organisms
Fluctuating environments
Speeds
Invasion speed
Mate-finding allee effect
Mating functions