Patch density, movement pattern, and realised dispersal distances in a patch-matrix landscape - a simulation study
Authored by Hans Joachim Poethke, Thomas Hovestadt, B Pfenning, S Hein
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2003.10.005
Sponsors:
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In metapopulation models it is common practice to use species-specific
dispersal distances to predict the exchange of individuals between
habitat patches. The influence of patch distribution on the reachability
of a habitat patch is usually ignored. In a patch-matrix simulation. we
investigated the effect of patch number, movement pattern and dispersal
mortality on realised animal dispersal distances.
In our spatially-explicit, individual-based simulations we demonstrate
that: (1) with increasing number of patches the number of immigrants
into patches further away from the release point decreases in all
scenarios ({''}shadow effect{''}), (2) this effect is strongest for a
random movement, (3) for rather uncorrelated walks a proper adjustment
of mean dispersal distance in the negative exponential model can account
for the effect of patch density on realised dispersal distances, (4)
with a more directed walk this is not possible as the distribution of
moving animals in the matrix becomes highly heterogeneous. This is due
to the narrow but far reaching shadow patches exert on other patches
further away from the release point. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights
reserved.
Tags
behavior
Seed dispersal
habitat
Fractal landscapes
Metapopulation dynamics
Explicit population-models
Bush-cricket
Proclossiana-eunomia lepidoptera
Butterfly
melitaea-cinxia
Plant
migration