Risky movement increases the rate of range expansion
Authored by Justin MJ Travis, Thomas Hovestadt, K A Barton, B L Phillips
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2011.1254
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The movement rules used by an individual determine both its survival and
dispersal success. Here, we develop a simple model that links
inter-patch movement behaviour with population dynamics in order to
explore how individual dispersal behaviour influences not only its
dispersal and survival, but also the population's rate of range
expansion. Whereas dispersers are most likely to survive when they
follow nearly straight lines and rapidly orient movement towards a
non-natal patch, the most rapid rates of range expansion are obtained
for trajectories in which individuals delay biasing their movement
towards a non-natal patch. This result is robust to the spatial
structure of the landscape. Importantly, in a set of evolutionary
simulations, we also demonstrate that the movement strategy that evolves
at an expanding front is much closer to that maximizing the rate of
range expansion than that which maximizes the survival of dispersers.
Our results suggest that if one of our conservation goals is the
facilitation of range-shifting, then current indices of connectivity
need to be complemented by the development and utilization of new
indices providing a measure of the ease with which a species spreads
across a landscape.
Tags
Individual-based model
Evolution
Landscape
Density-dependent dispersal
population
Strategies
Climate-change
Kin competition
Species borders
Assisted colonization