Abstract

Dispersal comprises a complex life-history syndrome that influences the demographic dynamics of especially those species that live in fragmented landscapes, the structure of which may in turn be expected to impose selection on dispersal. We have constructed an individual-based evolutionary sexual model of dispersal for species occurring as metapopulations in habitat patch networks. The model assumes correlated random walk dispersal with edge-mediated behaviour (habitat selection) and spatially correlated stochastic local dynamics. The model is parametrized with extensive data for the Glanville fritillary butterfly. Based on empirical results for a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the phosphoglucose isomerase (Pgi) gene, we assume that dispersal rate in the landscape matrix, fecundity and survival are affected by a locus with two alleles, A and C, individuals with the C allele being more mobile. The model was successfully tested with two independent empirical datasets on spatial variation in Pgi allele frequency. First, at the level of local populations, the frequency of the C allele is the highest in newly established isolated populations and the lowest in old isolated populations. Second, at the level of sub-networks with dissimilar numbers and connectivities of patches, the frequency of C increases with decreasing network size and hence with decreasing average metapopulation size. The frequency of C is the highest in landscapes where local extinction risk is high and where there are abundant opportunities to establish new populations. Our results indicate that the strength of the coupling of the ecological and evolutionary dynamics depends on the spatial scale and is asymmetric, demographic dynamics having a greater immediate impact on genetic dynamics than vice versa.

Highlights

  • Dispersal comprises a complex life-history syndrome that especially influences the demographic dynamics of species in temporally ephemeral and spatially fragmented habitats (Olivieri & Gouyon 1997; Hanski 1999; Ronce 2007; Moore & Hendry 2009)

  • Apart from examining how the structure of the fragmented landscape influences the evolution of dispersal in metapopulations, we analyse the possible coupling between the demographic and genetic dynamics involving dispersal

  • Evolution of dispersal is receiving much attention in the context of management and conservation (Kokko & Lopez-Sepulcre 2006), since climate change, habitat fragmentation and species invasions have ecological consequences related to dispersal and its evolution

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Dispersal comprises a complex life-history syndrome that especially influences the demographic dynamics of species in temporally ephemeral and spatially fragmented habitats (Olivieri & Gouyon 1997; Hanski 1999; Ronce 2007; Moore & Hendry 2009). Identifying the evolutionarily stable dispersal strategy under particular environmental conditions is a classic topic in life-history theory (Hamilton & May 1977; Comins et al 1980; Ronce & Olivieri 2004). In the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia), molecular variation in Pgi is associated with dispersal rate in the field (Niitepold et al in press) and in a large outdoor population cage (Saastamoinen & Hanski 2008), at least partly because. Apart from examining how the structure of the fragmented landscape influences the evolution of dispersal in metapopulations, we analyse the possible coupling between the demographic (ecological) and genetic (evolutionary) dynamics involving dispersal

EMPIRICAL DATA
Findings
DISCUSSION
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