Evolution of dispersal distance: Maternal investment leads to bimodal dispersal kernels
Authored by Hans Joachim Poethke, Emanuel A Fronhofer, Ulf Dieckmann
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2014.10.024
Sponsors:
European Science Foundation
European Union
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Since dispersal research has mainly focused on the evolutionary dynamics
of dispersal rates, it remains unclear what shape evolutionarily stable
dispersal kernels have. Yet, detailed knowledge about dispersal kernels, quantifying the statistical distribution of dispersal distances, is of
pivotal importance for understanding biogeographic diversity, predicting
species invasions, and explaining range shifts. We therefore examine the
evolution of dispersal kernels in an individual-based model of a
population of sessile organisms, such as trees or corals. Specifically, we analyze the influence of three potentially important factors on the
shape of dispersal kernels: distance-dependent competition, distance-dependent dispersal costs, and maternal investment reducing an
offspring's dispersal costs through a trade-off with maternal fecundity.
We find that without maternal investment, competition and dispersal
costs lead to unimodal kernels, with increasing dispersal costs reducing
the kernel's width and tail weight. Unexpectedly, maternal investment
inverts this effect: kernels become bimodal at high dispersal costs.
This increases a kernel's width and tail weight, and thus the fraction
of long-distance dispersers, at the expense of simultaneously increasing
the fraction of non-dispersers. We demonstrate the qualitative
robustness of our results against variations in the tested parameter
combinations. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Competition
ecology
Seed dispersal
Density
Consequences
Trade-offs
Plants
Dependent dispersal
Achene dimorphism
Spatial scales