• Title of article

    Metapopulation extinction risk: Dispersal’s duplicity

  • Author/Authors

    Higgins، نويسنده , , Kevin، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    146
  • To page
    155
  • Abstract
    Metapopulation extinction risk is the probability that all local populations are simultaneously extinct during a fixed time frame. Dispersal may reduce a metapopulation’s extinction risk by raising its average per-capita growth rate. By contrast, dispersal may raise a metapopulation’s extinction risk by reducing its average population density. Which effect prevails is controlled by habitat fragmentation. Dispersal in mildly fragmented habitat reduces a metapopulation’s extinction risk by raising its average per-capita growth rate without causing any appreciable drop in its average population density. By contrast, dispersal in severely fragmented habitat raises a metapopulation’s extinction risk because the rise in its average per-capita growth rate is more than offset by the decline in its average population density. The metapopulation model used here shows several other interesting phenomena. Dispersal in sufficiently fragmented habitat reduces a metapopulation’s extinction risk to that of a constant environment. Dispersal between habitat fragments reduces a metapopulation’s extinction risk insofar as local environments are asynchronous. Grouped dispersal raises the effective habitat fragmentation level. Dispersal search barriers raise metapopulation extinction risk. Nonuniform dispersal may reduce the effective fraction of suitable habitat fragments below the extinction threshold. Nonuniform dispersal may make demographic stochasticity a more potent metapopulation extinction force than environmental stochasticity.
  • Keywords
    dispersal , Density- dependence , extinction risk , metapopulation , Habitat fragmentation
  • Journal title
    Theoretical Population Biology
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Theoretical Population Biology
  • Record number

    1567205