The Emergent Properties of Conspecific Attraction Can Limit a Species' Ability to Track Environmental Change
Authored by Kirk W Stodola, Michael P Ward
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1086/691469
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Abstract
Multiple biotic, abiotic, and evolutionary constraints interact to
determine a species' range. However, most species are not present in all
suitable and accessible locations. Dispersal ability may explain why
many species do not occupy all suitable habitat, but highly mobile
species also exhibit a mismatch. Habitat selection behavior where
individuals are site faithful and settle near conspecifics could create
a social pressure that make a species' geographic range resistant to
change. We investigated this possibility by using an individual-based
model of habitat selection where habitat quality moved each year. Our
model demonstrated the benefits of conspecific attraction in relatively
stable environments and its detrimental influence when habitat quality
shifted rapidly. These results were most apparent when adult survival
was high, because site fidelity led to more individuals occupying
poor-quality habitat areas as habitat quality changed. These individuals
attracted other dispersing individuals, thereby decreasing the ability
to track shifts in habitat quality, which we refer to as social inertia.
Consequently, social inertia may arise for species that exhibit site
fidelity and conspecific attraction, which may have conservation
implications in light of climate change and widespread alteration of
natural habitats.
Tags
Conservation
Evolutionary perspectives
Habitat selection
Spatial scales
Range expansion
Conspecific attraction
Recent climate-change
Assisted colonization
Geographic range limits
Climate
change
Site
fidelity
Social cues
Breeding dispersal