Adaptive responses to habitat change: Theory and tests with field experiments.

Ecology

Department of Biology, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Habitat loss is a major factor in species extinction, but gradual habitat changes can allow individuals some adaptive advantages in finding better opportunities.
  • The study explores Adaptive Dispersal Strategy Landscapes, revealing that individuals in high-density populations often have limited adaptive advantage to leave their declining habitats, as better habitats are already occupied.
  • Experiments on meadow voles showed that while they preferred richer foraging areas, they did not permanently relocate, supporting the theoretical predictions about habitat selection and highlighting the need for better understanding ecological impacts of habitat loss.

Article Abstract

Habitat loss and change are often implicated as the primary causes of species extinction. Although any population can be instantly imperiled by catastrophe, most habitat loss occurs gradually, thus enabling affected individuals an adaptive advantage to occupy the best of their dwindling opportunities. I demonstrate how to infer the advantage between two habitats for any density and frequency-dependent strategy of habitat selection. I explore the concept of an Adaptive Dispersal Strategy Landscape to reveal the Evolutionarily Stable Strategy separately for ideal-free and ideal preemptive habitat selectors. Both solutions reveal an initially counterintuitive expectation that individuals living at high density gain insufficient adaptive advantage to disperse from a deteriorating habitat. Adaptive dispersal is constrained at high density because habitats of better quality are fully occupied. I test the theory with measures of movement and foraging in crossover experiments on a seminatural population of meadow voles. The experiment allowed the voles to choose among patches and between enclosures in which I differentially manipulated food and shelter. Although photographs from an infrared camera documented voles venturing from one habitat to the other, none became resident. Voles preferentially foraged in the richer of the two enclosures, even when I reversed treatments, and they foraged more in patches protected by mulched straw. The adaptive advantage of dispersal using a surrogate fitness proxy based on the voles' giving-up densities mirrored that generated by theory. The convergence between theory and experiment yields much-needed insight into our ability to test, predict, and hopefully resolve, the ecological, evolutionary, and conservation consequences of habitat loss.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4333DOI Listing

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