Uncertainty and the Role of Information Acquisition in the Evolution of Context-Dependent Emigration
Authored by Justin MJ Travis, Greta Bocedi, Johannes Heinonen
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1086/665004
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Abstract
There is increasing empirical evidence that individuals utilize social
and environmental cues in making decisions as to whether or not to
disperse. However, we lack theory exploring the influence of information
acquisition and use on the evolution of dispersal strategies and
metapopulation dynamics. We used an individual-based, spatially explicit
simulation model to explore the evolution of emigration strategies under
varying precision of information about the natal patch, cost of
information acquisition, and environmental predictability. Our findings
show an interesting interplay between information use and the evolved
emigration propensity. Lack of information led to higher emigration
probabilities in more unpredictable environments but to lower emigration
probabilities in constant or highly predictable scenarios.
Somewhat-informed dispersal strategies were selected for in most cases, even when the acquisition of information was associated with a moderate
reproductive cost. Notably, selection rarely favored investment in
acquisition of high-precision information, and the tendency to invest in
information acquisition was greatest in predictable environments when
the associated cost was low. Our results highlight that information use
can affect dispersal in a complex manner and also emphasize that
information-acquisition behaviors can themselves come under strong
selection, resulting in evolutionary dynamics that are tightly coupled
to those of context-dependent behaviors.
Tags
Climate-change
Individual-based
model
Population-density
Conspecific attraction
Patchy environments
Habitat persistence
Host-parasitoid systems
Conditional dispersal
Environmental correlation
Stable dispersal strategies