Title of article
Sex-specific spatio-temporal variability in reproductive success promotes the evolution of sex-biased dispersal
Author/Authors
Gros، نويسنده , , Andreas and Poethke، نويسنده , , Hans Joachim and Hovestadt، نويسنده , , Thomas، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
6
From page
13
To page
18
Abstract
Inbreeding depression, asymmetries in costs or benefits of dispersal, and the mating system have been identified as potential factors underlying the evolution of sex-biased dispersal. We use individual-based simulations to explore how the mating system and demographic stochasticity influence the evolution of sex-specific dispersal in a metapopulation with females competing over breeding sites, and males over mating opportunities. Comparison of simulation results for random mating with those for a harem system (locally, a single male sires all offspring) reveal that even extreme variance in local male reproductive success (extreme male competition) does not induce male-biased dispersal. The latter evolves if the between-patch variance in reproductive success is larger for males than females. This can emerge due to demographic stochasticity if the habitat patches are small. More generally, members of a group of individuals experiencing higher spatio-temporal variance in fitness expectations may evolve to disperse with greater probability than others.
Keywords
Sex-biased dispersal , demographic stochasticity , metapopulation , Individual-based simulation , Sex-specific competition
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Record number
1567174
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