The evolution of conditional dispersal and reproductive isolation along environmental gradients
Authored by Ulf Dieckmann, Rupert Mazzucco, Joshua L Payne
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2010.12.036
Sponsors:
European Union
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Dispersal modulates gene flow throughout a population's spatial range.
Gene flow affects adaptation at local spatial scales, and consequently
impacts the evolution of reproductive isolation. A recent theoretical
investigation has demonstrated that local adaptation along an
environmental gradient, facilitated by the evolution of limited
dispersal, can lead to parapatric speciation even in the absence of
assortative mating. This and other studies assumed unconditional
dispersal, so individuals start dispersing without regard to local
environmental conditions. However, many species disperse conditionally;
their propensity to disperse is contingent upon environmental cues, such
as the degree of local crowding or the availability of suitable mates.
Here, we use an individual-based model in continuous space to
investigate by numerical simulation the relationship between the
evolution of threshold-based conditional dispersal and parapatric
speciation driven by frequency-dependent competition along environmental
gradients. We find that, as with unconditional dispersal, parapatric
speciation occurs under a broad range of conditions when reproduction is
asexual, and under a more restricted range of conditions when
reproduction is sexual. In both the asexual and sexual cases, the
evolution of conditional dispersal is strongly influenced by the slope
of the environmental gradient: shallow environmental gradients result in
low dispersal thresholds and high dispersal distances, while steep
environmental gradients result in high dispersal thresholds and low
dispersal distances. The latter, however, remain higher than under
unconditional dispersal, thus undermining isolation by distance, and
hindering speciation in sexual populations. Consequently, the speciation
of sexual populations under conditional dispersal is triggered by a
steeper gradient than under unconditional dispersal. Enhancing the
disruptiveness of frequency-dependent selection, more box-shaped
competition kernels dramatically lower the speciation-enabling slope of
the environmental gradient. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Competition
selection
Density-dependent dispersal
Model
speciation
Demographic stochasticity
Population-dynamics
Limits
Local adaptation