CNRS-UMR 7625, Laboratoire Ecologie-Evolution, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France.
Mol Ecol. 2012 Feb;21(3):505-23. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2011.05410.x. Epub 2011 Dec 29.
A good understanding of mammalian societies requires measuring patterns and comprehending processes of dispersal in each sex. We investigated dispersal behaviour in arvicoline rodents, a subfamily of mammals widespread in northern temperate environments and characterized by a multivoltine life cycle. In arvicoline rodents, variation in life history strategies occurs along a continuum from precocial to delayed maturation that reflects seasonal and ecological fluctuations. We compared dispersal across and within species focusing on the effects of external (condition-dependent) and internal (phenotype-dependent) factors. Our data revealed substantial, unexplained variation between species for dispersal distances and a strong variation within species for both dispersal distance and fraction. Some methodological aspects explained variation across studies, which cautions against comparisons that do not control for them. Overall, the species under consideration display frequent short-distance dispersal events and extremely flexible dispersal strategies, but they also have hitherto unexpected capacity to disperse long distances. Female arvicolines are predominantly philopatric relative to males, but we found no clear association between the mating system and the degree of sex bias in dispersal across species. Dispersal is a response to both various proximate and ultimate factors, including competition, inbreeding avoidance, mate searching and habitat quality. In particular, our review suggests that costs and benefits experienced during transience and settlement are prime determinants of condition dependence. Patterns of phenotype-dependent dispersal are idiosyncratic, except for a widespread association between an exploration/activity syndrome and natal dispersal. Consequences for population dynamics and genetic structures are discussed.
要深入了解哺乳动物社会,就需要测量每一种性别的扩散模式,并理解其扩散过程。我们研究了广布于北温带环境的田鼠亚科啮齿动物的扩散行为,该亚科的动物具有多世代的生命周期,其扩散行为具有多样性。在田鼠亚科啮齿动物中,生活史策略的变化沿着一个从早熟到延迟成熟的连续体发生,这反映了季节性和生态波动。我们比较了不同物种和同一物种内部的扩散行为,重点关注外部(条件依赖)和内部(表型依赖)因素的影响。我们的数据揭示了不同物种之间在扩散距离上存在大量未解释的变异,并且在同一物种内,无论是在扩散距离还是在扩散比例上,都存在很强的变异。一些方法学方面的因素可以解释不同研究之间的变异,这就需要谨慎对待那些没有控制这些因素的比较。总的来说,所考虑的物种表现出频繁的短距离扩散事件和极其灵活的扩散策略,但它们也具有迄今为止出人意料的长距离扩散能力。与雄性相比,雌性田鼠亚科动物更倾向于留在出生地,但我们没有发现交配系统与物种间扩散的性别偏差程度之间有明显的联系。扩散是对各种近因和终极因素的反应,包括竞争、近亲繁殖回避、寻找配偶和栖息地质量。特别是,我们的综述表明,在过渡和定居期间经历的成本和收益是条件依赖的主要决定因素。表型依赖扩散的模式是独特的,除了探索/活动综合征与出生地扩散之间存在广泛的关联。还讨论了其对种群动态和遗传结构的影响。