Mutation surfing and the evolution of dispersal during range expansions
Authored by Justin MJ Travis, T Muenkemueller, O J Burton
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2010.02123.x
Sponsors:
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A growing body of empirical evidence demonstrates that at an expanding
front, there can be strong selection for greater dispersal propensity, whereas recent theory indicates that mutations occurring towards the
front of a spatially expanding population can sometimes `surf' to high
frequency and spatial extent. Here, we consider the potential interplay
between these two processes: what role may mutation surfing play in
determining the course of dispersal evolution and how might dispersal
evolution itself influence mutation surfing? Using an individual-based
coupled-map lattice model, we first run simulations to determine the
fate of dispersal mutants that occur at an expanding front. Our results
highlight that mutants that have a slightly higher dispersal propensity
than the wild type always have a higher survival probability than those
mutants with a dispersal propensity lower than, or very similar to, the
wild type. However, it is not always the case that mutants with very
high dispersal propensity have the greatest survival probability. When
dispersal mortality is high, mutants of intermediate dispersal survive
most often. Interestingly, the rate of dispersal that ultimately evolves
at an expanding front is often substantially higher than that which
confers a novel mutant with the greatest probability of survival.
Second, we run a model in which we allow dispersal to evolve over the
course of a range expansion and ask how the fate of a neutral or
nonneutral mutant depends upon when and where during the expansion it
arises. These simulations highlight that the success of a neutral mutant
depends upon the dispersal genotypes that it is associated with. An
important consequence of this is that novel mutants that arise at the
front of an expansion, and survive, typically end up being associated
with more dispersive genotypes than the wild type. These results offer
some new insights into causes and the consequences of dispersal
evolution during range expansions, and the methodology we have employed
can be readily extended to explore the evolutionary dynamics of other
life history characteristics.
Tags
Individual-based model
Metapopulation
Seed dispersal
Demographic stochasticity
fitness
Trade-offs
Invasions
Wave-front
Kin competition
Expanding population