Animals can use specific environmental cues to make informed decisions about whether and where to disperse. Patch conditions are known to affect the dispersal behavior of animals, but empirical studies investigating the impact of resource diversity on the dispersal of closely related species are largely lacking. In this study, we investigated how food diversity affects the dispersal behavior of three co-occurring cryptic species of the marine bacterivorous nematode complex (Pm I, Pm III and Pm IV). Using microcosms composed of a local patch (inoculation plate), a connection tube, and a distant patch (dispersal plate), we examined nematode dispersal patterns with bacteria serving as the food source. Food treatments included low-, medium-, and high-diversity bacterial mixtures of 5, 10, and 15 bacterial strains, respectively. Additionally, a single-strain food resource was used as a control treatment. Both local and distant patches had either identical food treatments ('homogeneous patches') or in the local patches and more diverse food (low-, medium-, or high-diversity food) in distant patches ('heterogeneous patches'). Our results show that the dispersal behavior of the cryptic species varies depending on food diversity, indicating that acquire information about their environment when making dispersal decisions. All three cryptic species tend to disperse faster toward food patches that increase fitness. Pm I and Pm IV exhibited faster dispersal toward patches with a more diverse food source, while Pm III showed similar dispersal rates toward , medium-diversity, and high-diversity food. This indicates that resource diversity can alter the dispersal behavior of cryptic species and may be an important mechanism to achieve species coexistence in the field.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11737338 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.18790 | DOI Listing |
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