Title of article
A spatially explicit model of sex ratio evolution in response to sex-biased dispersal
Author/Authors
Guillon، نويسنده , , Jean-Michel and Bottein، نويسنده , , Jean، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
9
From page
141
To page
149
Abstract
Sex-biased dispersal occurs in all seed plants and many animal species. Theoretical models have shown that sex-biased dispersal can lead to evolutionarily stable biased sex ratios. Here, we use a spatially explicit chessboard model to simulate the evolution of sex ratio in response to sex-biased dispersal range and sex-biased dispersal rate. Two life cycles are represented in the model: one in which both sexes disperse before mating (DDM), the other in which males disperse before mating and mated females or zygotes disperse after mating (DMD). Model parameters include factors like dispersal rate, dispersal range, number of individuals per patch, and habitat heterogeneity.
ispersal range is sex biased, we find that, in a homogeneous environment, the sex ratio is generally biased towards the sex that disperses more widely (sex ratio range: 0.47–0.52). In a heterogeneous environment, the sex ratio is generally biased towards the more dispersive sex in good habitats, and towards the less dispersive sex in poor habitats (sex ratio range: 0–1). This is opposite to the effect of sex-biased dispersal rate, which favours the production of the more dispersive sex in poor habitats and the less dispersive sex in good habitats (sex ratio range: 0–1). To allow for a comparison with theoretical predictions, data concerning sex-biased dispersal and habitat-dependent sex ratios should thus incorporate information about the spatial scale of both dispersal and environmental heterogeneity.
Keywords
Sex ratio , dispersal , Sex-biased dispersal , Spatial heterogeneity , Kin competition , sex allocation
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Record number
1567440
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