Abstract

Individuals may delay dispersing from their natal habitat, even after maturation to adulthood. Such delays can have broad consequences from determining population structure to allowing an individual to gain indirect fitness by helping parents rear future offspring. Dispersal in species that use delayed dispersal is largely thought to be opportunistic; however, how individuals, particularly inexperienced juveniles, assess their environments to determine the appropriate time to disperse is unknown. One relatively unexplored possibility is that dispersal decisions are the result of epigenetic mechanisms interacting between a genome and environment during development to generate variable dispersive phenotypes. Here, we tested this using epiRADseq to compare genome-wide levels of DNA methylation of blood in cooperatively breeding chestnut-crowned babblers (Pomatostomus ruficeps). We measured dispersive and philopatric individuals at hatching, before fledging, and at 1 year (following when first year dispersal decisions would be made). We found that individuals that dispersed in their first year had a reduced proportion of methylated loci than philopatric individuals before fledging, but not at hatching or as adults. Further, individuals that dispersed in the first year had a greater number of loci change methylation state (i.e. gain or lose) between hatching and fledging. The existence and timing of these changes indicate some influence of development on epigenetic changes that may influence dispersal behavior. However, further work needs to be done to address exactly how developmental environments may be associated with dispersal decisions and which loci in particular are manipulated to generate such changes.

Highlights

  • How animals move and disperse has broad implications for both the individual and the population

  • Reduced methylation of the genome, allowing greater flexibility of gene expression, can increase phenotypic plasticity of certain traits [15, 19, 45]; this may be beneficial for individuals with an unpredictable future environment, such as those expected for dispersing individuals

  • The epigenetic changes derived during development may prepare offspring for their future environments- whether they be predictable for philopatric individuals or unpredictable for dispersive individuals

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Summary

Introduction

How animals move and disperse has broad implications for both the individual (e.g. habitat) and the population (e.g. population structure). Dispersal itself is likely influenced by a myriad of factors relating to individual internal and external environment, including the genome [1,2,3,4]. Research suggests a relationship between dispersal and particular gene types such as lipid metabolism and antigen defense [5]. Differences in methylation and its relationship with dispersal and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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