The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants

Dispersal plays a key role in natural systems by shaping spatial population and evolutionary dynamics. Dispersal has been largely treated as a population process with little attention to individual decisions and the influence of information use on the fitness benefits of dispersal despite clear empi...

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Main Authors: Alexis S. Chaine, Stéphane Legendre, Jean Clobert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2013-02-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/44.pdf
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spelling doaj-e4402ef1070340a2a2bf4e747b8a1db92020-11-24T23:34:48ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592013-02-011e4410.7717/peerj.4444The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrantsAlexis S. Chaine0Stéphane Legendre1Jean Clobert2Station d’Ecologie Expérimentale du CNRS à Moulis, Moulis, FranceLaboratoire Ecologie & Evolution, Paris, FranceStation d’Ecologie Expérimentale du CNRS à Moulis, Moulis, FranceDispersal plays a key role in natural systems by shaping spatial population and evolutionary dynamics. Dispersal has been largely treated as a population process with little attention to individual decisions and the influence of information use on the fitness benefits of dispersal despite clear empirical evidence that dispersal behavior varies among individuals. While information on local density is common, more controversial is the notion that indirect information use can easily evolve. We used an individual-based model to ask under what conditions indirect information use in dispersal will evolve. We modeled indirect information provided by immigrant arrival into a population which should be linked to overall metapopulation density. We also modeled direct information use of density which directly impacts fitness. We show that immigrant-dependent dispersal evolves and does so even when density dependent information is available. Use of two sources of information also provides benefits at the metapopulation level by reducing extinction risk and prolonging the persistence of populations. Our results suggest that use of indirect information in dispersal can evolve under conservative conditions and thus could be widespread.https://peerj.com/articles/44.pdfSocial informationDispersalImmigrant-dependentMeta-populationDensity-dependentEvolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexis S. Chaine
Stéphane Legendre
Jean Clobert
spellingShingle Alexis S. Chaine
Stéphane Legendre
Jean Clobert
The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants
PeerJ
Social information
Dispersal
Immigrant-dependent
Meta-population
Density-dependent
Evolution
author_facet Alexis S. Chaine
Stéphane Legendre
Jean Clobert
author_sort Alexis S. Chaine
title The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants
title_short The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants
title_full The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants
title_fullStr The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants
title_full_unstemmed The co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants
title_sort co-evolution of multiply-informed dispersal: information transfer across landscapes from neighbors and immigrants
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2013-02-01
description Dispersal plays a key role in natural systems by shaping spatial population and evolutionary dynamics. Dispersal has been largely treated as a population process with little attention to individual decisions and the influence of information use on the fitness benefits of dispersal despite clear empirical evidence that dispersal behavior varies among individuals. While information on local density is common, more controversial is the notion that indirect information use can easily evolve. We used an individual-based model to ask under what conditions indirect information use in dispersal will evolve. We modeled indirect information provided by immigrant arrival into a population which should be linked to overall metapopulation density. We also modeled direct information use of density which directly impacts fitness. We show that immigrant-dependent dispersal evolves and does so even when density dependent information is available. Use of two sources of information also provides benefits at the metapopulation level by reducing extinction risk and prolonging the persistence of populations. Our results suggest that use of indirect information in dispersal can evolve under conservative conditions and thus could be widespread.
topic Social information
Dispersal
Immigrant-dependent
Meta-population
Density-dependent
Evolution
url https://peerj.com/articles/44.pdf
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