Fronhofer Emanuel A, Kropf Tabea, Altermatt Florian
Department of Aquatic Ecology, Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Überlandstrasse 133, CH-8600, Dübendorf, Switzerland.
Department of Environmental Systems Science, ETH Zürich, CH-8092, Zürich, Switzerland.
J Anim Ecol. 2015 May;84(3):712-722. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12315. Epub 2014 Dec 17.
Movement and dispersal are critical processes for almost all organisms in natural populations. Understanding their causes and consequences is therefore of high interest. While both theoretical and empirical work suggest that dispersal, more exactly emigration, is plastic and may be a function of local population density, the functional relationship between the underlying movement strategies and population density has received less attention. We here present evidence for the shape of this reaction norm and are able to differentiate between three possible cues: the relative number of individuals, the presence of metabolites (chemical cues) and resource availability. We performed microcosm experiments with the ciliate model organism Tetrahymena in order to understand the plasticity of movement strategies with respect to local density while controlling for possible confounding effects mediated by the availability of different cues. In addition, we investigated how an Allee effect can influence movement and dispersal plasticity. Our findings suggest that movement strategies in Tetrahymena are plastic and density-dependent. The observed movement reaction norm was U-shaped. This may be due to an Allee effect which led to negative density dependence at low population densities and generally positive density dependence at high population densities due to local competition. This possibly adaptive density-dependent movement strategy was likely mediated by chemical cues. Our experimental work in highly controlled conditions indicates that both environmental cues as well as inherent population dynamics must be considered to understand movement and dispersal.
对于自然种群中的几乎所有生物来说,移动和扩散都是至关重要的过程。因此,了解其原因和后果备受关注。虽然理论和实证研究都表明,扩散,更确切地说是迁出,具有可塑性,可能是当地种群密度的函数,但潜在的移动策略与种群密度之间的功能关系却较少受到关注。我们在此展示了这种反应规范的形状的证据,并能够区分三种可能的线索:个体的相对数量、代谢产物的存在(化学线索)和资源可用性。我们用纤毛虫模式生物四膜虫进行了微观实验,以了解移动策略相对于局部密度的可塑性,同时控制由不同线索的可用性介导的可能的混杂效应。此外,我们研究了阿利效应如何影响移动和扩散可塑性。我们的研究结果表明,四膜虫的移动策略具有可塑性且依赖于密度。观察到的移动反应规范呈U形。这可能是由于阿利效应导致在低种群密度下出现负密度依赖,而在高种群密度下由于局部竞争通常出现正密度依赖。这种可能具有适应性的密度依赖移动策略可能是由化学线索介导的。我们在高度受控条件下的实验工作表明,为了理解移动和扩散,必须同时考虑环境线索以及内在的种群动态。