dc.description.abstract |
Aim A species’ dispersal characteristics will play a key role in determining its
likely fate during a period of environmental change. However, these
characteristics are not constant within a species – instead, there is often both
considerable interpopulation and interindividual variability. Also changes in
selection pressures can result in the evolution of dispersal characteristics, with
knock-on consequences for a species’ population dynamics. Our aim here is to
make our theoretical understanding of dispersal evolution more conservationrelevant
by moving beyond the rather abstract, phenomenological models that
have dominated the literature towards a more mechanism-based approach.
Methods We introduce a continuous-space, individual-based model for winddispersed
plants where release height is determined by an individual’s ‘genotype’.
A mechanistic wind dispersal model is used to simulate seed dispersal. Selection
acts on variation in release height that is generated through mutation.
Results We confirm that, when habitat is fragmented, both evolutionary rescue
and evolutionary suicide remain possible outcomes when a mechanistic dispersal
model is used. We also demonstrate the potential for what we term evolutionary
entrapment. A population that under some conditions can evolve to be
sufficiently dispersive that it expands rapidly across a fragmented landscape
can, under different conditions, become trapped by a combination of limited
dispersal and a large gap between patches.
Conclusions While developing evolutionary models to be used as conservation
tools is undoubtedly a challenge, we believe that, with a concerted collaborative
effort linking the knowledge and methods of ecologists, evolutionary biologists
and geneticists, it is an achievable aim. |
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