Fronhofer, Emanuel A and Bonte, Dries and Bestion, Elvire and Cote, Julien and Deshpande, Jhelam N and Duncan, Alison B and Hovestadt, Thomas and Kaltz, Oliver and Keith, Sally A and Kokko, Hanna and Legrand, Delphine and Malusare, Sarthak P and Parmentier, Thomas and Saade, Camille and Schtickzelle, Nicolas and Zilio, Giacomo and Massol, François (2024) Evolutionary ecology of dispersal in biodiverse spatially structured systems : what is old and what is new? Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 379 (1907): 20230142. ISSN 0962-8436
RSTB_Author_tex.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (2MB)
Abstract
Dispersal is a well-recognized driver of ecological and evolutionary dynamics, and simultaneously an evolving trait. Dispersal evolution has traditionally been studied in single-species metapopulations so that it remains unclear how dispersal evolves in metacommunities and metafoodwebs, which are characterized by a multitude of species interactions. Since most natural systems are both species-rich and spatially structured, this knowledge gap should be bridged. Here, we discuss whether knowledge from dispersal evolutionary ecology established in single-species systems holds in metacommunities and metafoodwebs and we highlight generally valid and fundamental principles. Most biotic interactions form the backdrop to the ecological theatre for the evolutionary dispersal play because interactions mediate patterns of fitness expectations across space and time. While this allows for a simple transposition of certain known principles to a multispecies context, other drivers may require more complex transpositions, or might not be transferred. We discuss an important quantitative modulator of dispersal evolution-increased trait dimensionality of biodiverse meta-systems-and an additional driver: co-dispersal. We speculate that scale and selection pressure mismatches owing to co-dispersal, together with increased trait dimensionality, may lead to a slower and more 'diffuse' evolution in biodiverse meta-systems. Open questions and potential consequences in both ecological and evolutionary terms call for more investigation. This article is part of the theme issue 'Diversity-dependence of dispersal: interspecific interactions determine spatial dynamics'.