On the elasticity of range limits during periods of expansion
Authored by Hans Joachim Poethke, Alexander Kubisch, Thomas Hovestadt
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1890/09-2022.1
Sponsors:
European Union
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Dispersal is known to play a crucial role in the formation of species'
ranges. Recent studies demonstrate that dispersiveness increases rapidly
during the range expansion of species due to a fitness increase for
dispersers at the expanding front. R. D. Holt concluded, however, that
emigration should decline after the period of invasion and hence
predicted some range contraction following the initial expansion phase.
In this study, we evaluate this hypothesis using a spatially explicit
individual-based model of populations distributed along environmental
gradients. In our experiments we allow the species to spread along a
gradient of declining conditions. Results show that range contraction
did emerge in a gradient of dispersal mortality, caused by the rapid
increase in emigration probability during invasion and selection
disfavoring dispersal, once a stable range is formed. However, gradients
in growth rate, local extinction rate, and patch capacity did not lead
to a noticeable contraction of the range. We conclude, that the
phenomenon of range contraction may emerge, but only under conditions
that select for a reduction in dispersal at the range edge in comparison
to the core region once the expansion period is over.
Tags
Evolution
Dynamics
Density-dependent dispersal
Strategies
Populations
Climate-change
Extinction
Margins
Species ranges
Environmental gradient