Abstract

As anthropogenic impacts on the natural world escalate, there is increasing interest in the role of humans in dispersing seeds. But the consequences of this Human-Mediated Dispersal (HMD) on plant spatial dynamics are little studied. In this paper, we ask how secondary dispersal by HMD affects the dynamics of a natural plant metapopulation. In addition to dispersal between patches, we suggest within-patch processes can be critical. To address this, we assess how variation in local population dynamics, caused by small-scale disturbances, affects metapopulation size. We created an empirically based model with stochastic population dynamics and dispersal among patches, which represented a real-world, cliff-top metapopulation of wild cabbage Brassica oleracea. We collected demographic data from multiple populations by tagging plants over eight years. We assessed seed survival, and establishment and survival of seedlings in intact vegetation vs. small disturbances. We modeled primary dispersal by wind using field data and used experimental data on secondary HMD by hikers. We monitored occupancy patterns over a 14-yr period in the real metapopulation. Disturbance had large effects on local population growth rates, by increasing seedling establishment and survival. This meant that the modeled metapopulation grew in size only when the area disturbed in each patch was above 35%. In these growing metapopulations, although only 0.2% of seeds underwent HMD, this greatly enhanced metapopulation growth rates. Similarly, HMD allowed more colonizations in declining metapopulations under low disturbance, and this slowed the rate of decline. The real metapopulation showed patterns of varying patch occupancy over the survey years, which were related to habitat quality, but also positively to human activity along the cliffs, hinting at beneficial effects of humans. These findings illustrate that realistic changes to dispersal or demography, specifically by humans, can have fundamental effects on the viability of a species at the landscape scale.

Highlights

  • The two fundamental processes driving the dynamics of a plant metapopulation are dispersal among habitat patches and the demography of populations within patches

  • These findings illustrate that realistic changes to dispersal or demography, by humans, can have fundamental effects on the viability of a species at the landscape scale

  • Occupancy was dynamic in those sections exhibiting turnover; over the survey years we found 86 apparent colonization events and 84 extinctions (Appendix S1: Fig. S2)

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Summary

Introduction

The two fundamental processes driving the dynamics of a plant metapopulation are dispersal among habitat patches and the demography of populations within patches. Dispersal allows the colonization of patches and can rescue declining populations (Bullock et al 2002). Dispersal limitation can cause population extinctions (Hooftman et al 2016) or prevent colonization of new habitat (Verheyen and Hermy 2001). Any factor that impacts on dispersal is Manuscript received 6 December 2019; revised 12 February 2020; accepted 30 March 2020.

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