University of Würzburg, Field Station Fabrikschleichach, Glashüttenstrasse 5, D-96181 Rauhenebrach, Germany.
Am Nat. 2010 May;175(5):577-86. doi: 10.1086/651595.
It is widely accepted that organisms adjust their dispersal propensity to local population density, but there has been no analysis of how they should react to changes in environmental conditions that reduce local density. We take the case of delayed predator-induced dispersal (PID) in aphids to explore in which way current environmental conditions may be utilized as an appropriate signal for dispersal decisions. In aphids, the presence of predators triggers the production of winged offspring that may later leave the plant and shift their center of activity permanently. Using individual-based simulations as well as analytical approximations, we explore under which conditions PID is likely to evolve. We demonstrate that this requires substantial temporal correlation in predation risk and weak competition among prey; these conditions may be fulfilled in the aphid system. We discuss the analogy between the specific case of PID and the evolution of conditional emigration in the face of spatiotemporally correlated deterioration in reproduction or survival.
人们普遍认为,生物会根据当地种群密度来调整其扩散倾向,但对于它们应如何应对降低当地密度的环境条件变化,还没有分析。我们以延迟的捕食者诱导扩散(PID)为例,探讨了当前环境条件如何被用作扩散决策的适当信号。在蚜虫中,捕食者的存在会触发有翼后代的产生,这些后代以后可能会离开植物并永久转移其活动中心。我们使用基于个体的模拟以及分析近似法,探讨了 PID 可能进化的条件。我们证明,这需要捕食风险的实质性时间相关和猎物之间的弱竞争;这些条件在蚜虫系统中可能得到满足。我们讨论了特定的 PID 案例与在繁殖或生存的时空相关恶化情况下条件性迁移的进化之间的类比。