Station d'Ecologie Théorique et Expérimentale, CNRS, UAR 2029, Moulis 09200, France.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, 25 Willcocks Street, Toronto, Canada M5S 3B2.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Jul 29;379(1907):20230127. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0127. Epub 2024 Jun 24.
Context-dependent dispersal allows organisms to seek and settle in habitats improving their fitness. Despite the importance of species interactions in determining fitness, a quantitative synthesis of how they affect dispersal is lacking. We present a meta-analysis asking (i) whether the interaction experienced and/or perceived by a focal species (detrimental interaction with predators, competitors, parasites or beneficial interaction with resources, hosts, mutualists) affects its dispersal; and (ii) how the species' ecological and biological background affects the direction and strength of this interaction-dependent dispersal. After a systematic search focusing on actively dispersing species, we extracted 397 effect sizes from 118 empirical studies encompassing 221 species pairs; arthropods were best represented, followed by vertebrates, protists and others. Detrimental species interactions increased the focal species' dispersal (adjusted effect: 0.33 [0.06, 0.60]), while beneficial interactions decreased it (-0.55 [-0.92, -0.17]). The effect depended on the dispersal phase, with detrimental interactors having opposite impacts on emigration and transience. Interaction-dependent dispersal was negatively related to species' interaction strength, and depended on the global community composition, with cues of presence having stronger effects than the presence of the interactor and the ecological complexity of the community. Our work demonstrates the importance of interspecific interactions on dispersal plasticity, with consequences for metacommunity dynamics.This article is part of the theme issue 'Diversity-dependence of dispersal: interspecific interactions determine spatial dynamics'.
语境依赖扩散使生物能够寻找和定居在改善其适应性的栖息地中。尽管物种相互作用在决定适应性方面非常重要,但缺乏对其如何影响扩散的定量综合。我们提出了一项荟萃分析,询问(i)一个焦点物种所经历和/或感知到的相互作用(与捕食者、竞争者、寄生虫的有害相互作用,或与资源、宿主、互惠共生体的有益相互作用)是否会影响其扩散;以及(ii)物种的生态和生物学背景如何影响这种依赖于相互作用的扩散的方向和强度。在一项专注于主动扩散物种的系统搜索之后,我们从 118 项实证研究中提取了 397 个效应量,涵盖了 221 个物种对;节肢动物的代表性最强,其次是脊椎动物、原生动物和其他动物。有害物种相互作用增加了焦点物种的扩散(调整后的效应:0.33 [0.06,0.60]),而有益相互作用则减少了扩散(-0.55 [-0.92,-0.17])。这种效应取决于扩散阶段,有害相互作用者对迁出和暂居有相反的影响。依赖于相互作用的扩散与物种相互作用强度呈负相关,并取决于全球群落组成,存在的线索比相互作用者的存在和群落的生态复杂性具有更强的影响。我们的工作证明了种间相互作用对扩散可塑性的重要性,对集合动态具有影响。本文是主题为“扩散的多样性依赖性:种间相互作用决定空间动态”的一部分。