4.5 Article

Dispersal mood revealed by shifts from routine to direct flights in the meadow brown butterfly Maniola jurtina

Journal

OIKOS
Volume 119, Issue 12, Pages 1900-1908

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2010.18615.x

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Funding

  1. French Ministry in charge of Higher Learning and Research
  2. French Ministry in charge of Environment [07-000025]
  3. EU [226852]

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A comprehensive mechanistic approach to dispersal requires the translation of the whole mobility register of the target organism into movement rules that could subsequently be used to model its displacements. According to the optimality paradigm, this procedure implies a cost-benefit analysis of mobility patterns taking into account not only movements, but also their external context and the internal state of the moving individuals. Using this framework, we detected a 'dispersal mood' in some individuals of the meadow brown butterfly Maniola jurtina. These adopted a direct flight strategy, which was topologically different from the previously documented foray search strategy. Those individuals that used the direct flight strategy moved straighter as soon as they left the habitat and avoided heading back to their patch of origin, which is the best inter-patch search strategy when dispersal risks and costs are high. The direct flight strategy was conditional to sex: females used it twice as much as males. We suggest that this sex bias was due to female investment in offspring, which is maximized by male avoidance and spatial bet hedging. Inter-patch dispersal of gravid females is crucial for the persistence of M. jurtina populations in spatially and temporally unpredictable environments.

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