Mate-Finding as an Overlooked Critical Determinant of Dispersal Variation in Sexually-Reproducing Animals
Authored by James J Gilroy, Julie L Lockwood
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038091
Sponsors:
United States Fish and Wildlife Service
Platforms:
Microsoft Visual Basic
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Dispersal is a critically important process in ecology, but robust
predictive models of animal dispersal remain elusive. We identify a
potentially ubiquitous component of variation in animal dispersal that
has been largely overlooked until now: the influence of mate encounters
on settlement probability. We use an individual-based model to simulate
dispersal in sexually-reproducing organisms that follow a simple set of
movement rules based on conspecific encounters, within an environment
lacking spatial habitat heterogeneity. We show that dispersal distances
vary dramatically with fluctuations in population density in such a
model, even in the absence of variation in dispersive traits between
individuals. In a simple random-walk model with promiscuous mating, dispersal distributions become increasingly `fat-tailed' at low
population densities due to the increasing scarcity of mates. Similar
variation arises in models incorporating territoriality. In a model with
polygynous mating, we show that patterns of sex-biased dispersal can
even be reversed across a gradient of population density, despite
underlying dispersal mechanisms remaining unchanged. We show that some
widespread dispersal patterns found in nature (e.g. fat tailed
distributions) can arise as a result of demographic variability in the
absence of heterogeneity in dispersive traits across the population.
This implies that models in which individual dispersal distances are
considered to be fixed traits might be unrealistic, as dispersal
distances vary widely under a single dispersal mechanism when settlement
is influenced by mate encounters. Mechanistic models offer a promising
means of advancing our understanding of dispersal in
sexually-reproducing organisms.
Tags
Evolution
Density-dependent dispersal
birds
mammals
Behavioral-responses
Mating systems
Sex-biased dispersal
Movement
behavior
Fragmented
landscapes
Population processes