Sex-specific dispersal and evolutionary rescue in metapopulations infected by male killing endosymbionts
Authored by Hans Joachim Poethke, Thomas Hovestadt, Dries Bonte
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-9-16
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Flanders Research Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Male killing endosymbionts manipulate their arthropod host
reproduction by only allowing female embryos to develop into infected
females and killing all male offspring. Because the resulting change in
sex ratio is expected to affect the evolution of sex-specific dispersal, we investigated under which environmental conditions strong sex-biased
dispersal would emerge, and how this would affect host and endosymbiont
metapopulation persistence.
Results: We simulated host-endosymbiont metapopulation dynamics in an
individual-based model, in which dispersal rates are allowed to evolve
independently for the two sexes. Prominent male-biased dispersal emerges
under conditions of low environmental stochasticity and high dispersal
mortality. By applying a reshuffling algorithm, we show that
kin-competition is a major driver of this evolutionary pattern because
of the high within-population relatedness of males compared to those of
females. Moreover, the evolution of sex-specific dispersal rescues
metapopulations from extinction by (i) reducing endosymbiont fixation
rates and (ii) by enhancing the extinction of endosymbionts within
metapopulations that are characterized by low environmental
stochasticity.
Conclusion: Male killing endosymbionts induce the evolution of
sex-specific dispersal, with prominent male-biased dispersal under
conditions of low environmental stochasticity and high dispersal
mortality. This male-biased dispersal emerges from stronger
kin-competition in males compared to females and induces an evolutionary
rescue mechanism.
Tags
Density dependence
population
bacteria
Rates
Consequences
Host
Local extinction
Kin competition
Wolf spider
Wolbachia