Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.

Interspecific competition, life history traits, environmental heterogeneity and spatial structure as well as disturbance are known to impact the successful dispersal strategies in metacommunities. However, studies on the direction of impact of those factors on dispersal have yielded contradictory re...

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Main Authors: Lucie Büchi, Séverine Vuilleumier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3321035?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a258724b122c46aeb8b10796e64143ec2020-11-24T20:40:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0174e3473310.1371/journal.pone.0034733Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.Lucie BüchiSéverine VuilleumierInterspecific competition, life history traits, environmental heterogeneity and spatial structure as well as disturbance are known to impact the successful dispersal strategies in metacommunities. However, studies on the direction of impact of those factors on dispersal have yielded contradictory results and often considered only few competing dispersal strategies at the same time. We used a unifying modeling approach to contrast the combined effects of species traits (adult survival, specialization), environmental heterogeneity and structure (spatial autocorrelation, habitat availability) and disturbance on the selected, maintained and coexisting dispersal strategies in heterogeneous metacommunities. Using a negative exponential dispersal kernel, we allowed for variation of both species dispersal distance and dispersal rate. We showed that strong disturbance promotes species with high dispersal abilities, while low local adult survival and habitat availability select against them. Spatial autocorrelation favors species with higher dispersal ability when adult survival and disturbance rate are low, and selects against them in the opposite situation. Interestingly, several dispersal strategies coexist when disturbance and adult survival act in opposition, as for example when strong disturbance regime favors species with high dispersal abilities while low adult survival selects species with low dispersal. Our results unify apparently contradictory previous results and demonstrate that spatial structure, disturbance and adult survival determine the success and diversity of coexisting dispersal strategies in competing metacommunities.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3321035?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucie Büchi
Séverine Vuilleumier
spellingShingle Lucie Büchi
Séverine Vuilleumier
Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lucie Büchi
Séverine Vuilleumier
author_sort Lucie Büchi
title Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.
title_short Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.
title_full Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.
title_fullStr Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.
title_full_unstemmed Dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.
title_sort dispersal strategies, few dominating or many coexisting: the effect of environmental spatial structure and multiple sources of mortality.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Interspecific competition, life history traits, environmental heterogeneity and spatial structure as well as disturbance are known to impact the successful dispersal strategies in metacommunities. However, studies on the direction of impact of those factors on dispersal have yielded contradictory results and often considered only few competing dispersal strategies at the same time. We used a unifying modeling approach to contrast the combined effects of species traits (adult survival, specialization), environmental heterogeneity and structure (spatial autocorrelation, habitat availability) and disturbance on the selected, maintained and coexisting dispersal strategies in heterogeneous metacommunities. Using a negative exponential dispersal kernel, we allowed for variation of both species dispersal distance and dispersal rate. We showed that strong disturbance promotes species with high dispersal abilities, while low local adult survival and habitat availability select against them. Spatial autocorrelation favors species with higher dispersal ability when adult survival and disturbance rate are low, and selects against them in the opposite situation. Interestingly, several dispersal strategies coexist when disturbance and adult survival act in opposition, as for example when strong disturbance regime favors species with high dispersal abilities while low adult survival selects species with low dispersal. Our results unify apparently contradictory previous results and demonstrate that spatial structure, disturbance and adult survival determine the success and diversity of coexisting dispersal strategies in competing metacommunities.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3321035?pdf=render
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