Evolved dispersal strategies at range margins
Authored by Calvin Dytham
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2008.1535
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Abstract
Dispersal is a key component of a species's ecology and will be under
different selection pressures in different parts of the range. For
example, a long-distance dispersal strategy suitable for continuous
habitat at the range core might not be favoured at the margin, where the
habitat is sparse. Using a spatially explicit, individual-based, evolutionary simulation model, the dispersal strategies of an organism
that has only one dispersal event in its lifetime, such as a plant or
sessile animal, are considered. Within the model, removing habitat, increasing habitat turnover, increasing the cost of dispersal, reducing
habitat quality or altering vital rates imposes range limits. In most
cases, there is a clear change in the dispersal strategies across the
range, although increasing death rate towards the margin has little
impact on evolved dispersal strategy across the range. Habitat turnover, reduced birth rate and reduced habitat quality all increase evolved
dispersal distances at the margin, while increased cost of dispersal and
reduced habitat density lead to lower evolved dispersal distances at the
margins. As climate change shifts suitable habitat poleward, species
ranges will also start to shift, and it will be the dispersal
capabilities of marginal populations, rather than core populations, that
will influence the rate of range shifting.
Tags
Individual-based model
Simulation
Evolution
Density-dependent dispersal
Metapopulation
Populations
Landscapes
Responses
Species range
Seed
dispersal