School of Natural Sciences, University of California, Merced, CA 95340, USA
The Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 May 19;373(1746). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0018.
The spatial dispersal of individuals plays an important role in the dynamics of populations, and is central to metapopulation theory. Dispersal provides connections within metapopulations, promoting demographic and evolutionary rescue, but may also introduce maladapted individuals, potentially lowering the fitness of recipient populations through introgression of heritable traits. To explore this dual nature of dispersal, we modify a well-established eco-evolutionary model of two locally adapted populations and their associated mean trait values, to examine recruiting salmon populations that are connected by density-dependent dispersal, consistent with collective migratory behaviour that promotes navigation. When the strength of collective behaviour is weak such that straying is effectively constant, we show that a low level of straying is associated with the highest gains in metapopulation robustness and that high straying serves to erode robustness. Moreover, we find that as the strength of collective behaviour increases, metapopulation robustness is enhanced, but this relationship depends on the rate at which individuals stray. Specifically, strong collective behaviour increases the presence of hidden low-density basins of attraction, which may serve to trap disturbed populations, and this is exacerbated by increased habitat heterogeneity. Taken as a whole, our findings suggest that density-dependent straying and collective migratory behaviour may help metapopulations, such as in salmon, thrive in dynamic landscapes. Given the pervasive eco-evolutionary impacts of dispersal on metapopulations, these findings have important ramifications for the conservation of salmon metapopulations facing both natural and anthropogenic contemporary disturbances.This article is part of the theme issue 'Collective movement ecology'.
个体的空间扩散在种群动态中起着重要作用,是复合种群理论的核心。扩散为复合种群内提供了联系,促进了人口统计和进化救援,但也可能引入适应不良的个体,通过遗传特征的渗透,潜在降低受体种群的适应性。为了探索扩散的这种双重性质,我们修改了一个成熟的两个局部适应种群及其相关平均特征值的生态进化模型,以研究通过密度依赖扩散连接的招募鲑鱼种群,这种扩散与促进导航的集体洄游行为一致。当集体行为的强度较弱,以至于偏离实际上是恒定的时,我们表明,低水平的偏离与最高的复合种群健壮性增益相关,而高水平的偏离则侵蚀了健壮性。此外,我们发现随着集体行为强度的增加,复合种群的健壮性得到增强,但这种关系取决于个体偏离的速度。具体来说,强烈的集体行为增加了隐藏的低密度吸引盆地的存在,这可能有助于困住受干扰的种群,而栖息地异质性的增加则加剧了这种情况。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,密度依赖的偏离和集体洄游行为可能有助于鲑鱼等复合种群在动态景观中茁壮成长。鉴于扩散对复合种群的普遍生态进化影响,这些发现对面临自然和人为当代干扰的鲑鱼复合种群的保护具有重要意义。本文是主题为“集体运动生态学”的一部分。