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Sex-specific spatio-temporal variability in reproductive success promotes the evolution of sex-biased dispersal

期刊

THEORETICAL POPULATION BIOLOGY
卷 76, 期 1, 页码 13-18

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ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.tpb.2009.03.002

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Sex-biased dispersal; Demographic stochasticity; Metapopulation; Individual-based simulation; Sex-specific competition

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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-parch 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. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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