Single-Species Populations IV: Metapopulations and Other Spatially-Structured Populations Flashcards

1
Q

The spatial ecology of individual small, extinction-prone populations is often

A

patchy, but not isolated.

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2
Q

In individual small, extinction-prone populations, population persistence and dynamics depend on

A

the capacity of individuals to move and disperse between connected patches.

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3
Q

On a landscape scale, population persistence can be explained by

A
  • rates of movement
  • colonisation
  • extinction
  • interactions between these three variables
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4
Q

Under logistic growth

A
  • r declines with density
  • reflects the ability of density-dependence to regulate an exponentially growing population abouts its environmental carrying capacity
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5
Q

r

A

per capita growth rate

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6
Q

Fragmented habitats often display

A
  • small populations undergoing breeding depression
  • extinction prone because of the vulnerability of their local population to stochastic events
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7
Q

On landscape fragmentation, local population patches are

A

reduced in area and coupled with high extinction rates and disintegration of social structures

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8
Q

From what do high extinction rates arise?

A
  • environmental and demographic stochasticity
  • drift
  • high heterozygosity
  • alee effects
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9
Q

Describe recolonisation in an open system

A

Nt+1 = Nt + Births - Deaths + Immigrants – Emigrants.

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10
Q

What are the amoung-population processes

A

Immigration and emigration

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11
Q

Describe the amoung-population processes

A
  • critical to fragmented population persistence
  • dispersal ability relative to fragmentation determines population structure and survival
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12
Q

In a spatial context, fragmented landscapes sometimes form

A

metapopulations – populations of populations.

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13
Q

A non-equilibrium metapopulation is when

A

extinction is higher than colonisation, leading to an inevitable, albeit slow, population decline

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14
Q

What does metapopulation formation allow?

A
  • species persistence in the landscape as a balance of rates of local extinction and colonisation events between patches
  • patches ‘blink’ on off, with colonisation and extinction respectively
  • only some of the patches are occupied during any one time slice.
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15
Q

Give an example of a non-equilibrium metapopulation

A
  • Meliteaea cinxia, the Glanville Fritillary, found in Åland, Finland
  • studied by Hanski, broadly considered the godfather of metapopulation biology
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16
Q

Describe Hanski

A

pioneered the study of dynamic spatial distribution of populations

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17
Q

Describe the formalisation and modelling of metapopulations

A
  • Levins
  • rate of change of occupied patches = c - e.
  • dp/dt = cp(1-p) – ep
18
Q

c

A

colonisation

19
Q

e

A

extinction

20
Q

p

A

patch

21
Q

stable equilibrium of occupied p fraction occurs when

A
  • c = e
  • when the differential = 0
  • pˆ = 1- e/c
22
Q

Describe Levins analysis

A
  • higher the rate of colonisation and lower the rate of extinction, the greater the proportion of patches that would be occupied
  • coser habitat patches ease dispersal and have a higher colonisation rate
  • smaller populations more vulnerable to stochastic extinction
23
Q

Describe a phenomenon that increases the chance of landscape-level extinction

A

correlated population dynamics that mirror each other across fragments

24
Q

Describe how colonisation rates have been maximised

A

ensuring the geographical closeness and connection of patches

25
Q

Describe uncorrelated population dynamics

A
  • decrease the probability of simultaneous local extinction
  • leads to global extinction, across patches
  • allow for the dispersal events that allow recolonisation of locally extinct patches
26
Q

Which metapopulations are the most unstable?

A

correlated metapopulations

27
Q

Give an example of spatial conservation to minimise e rates

A
  • habitat management to increase habitat area and resources (to allow for a corresponding increase in carrying capacity)
  • reducing population variations ensuring heterogeneity of patches
  • differential management to allow optimisation to different stochastic events reduces population synchrony, maintaining the likelihood of dispersal events to avoid landscape-level extinction
28
Q

Describe how p-hat has been maximised

A

conservation of empty habitat patches to prepare for potential future colonisation

29
Q

What are metapopulations?

A

populations of just less than average connectivity and variance in patch size

30
Q

What are non-equilibrium populations?

A

when patches are highly isolated and the variance in size is mostly small

31
Q

How is population connectivity measured

A

dispersal distance relative to inner-patch distance

32
Q

What are island-mainland (or core-satellite) populations

A

highly isolated but with high patch size variance

33
Q

What are patchy panmictic populations?

A

connectivity is slightly better than in metapopulations, but patch size variance is slightly larger

34
Q

What are dissected populations?

A

connectivity is high but patch size is still variable

35
Q

Each different fragmented population structure has

A

different implications for their practical conservation strategies.

36
Q

Describe and give an example of a patchy population

A
  • organisms display high mobility and therefore dispersal is high
  • extinction rate is much less than the colonisation rate
  • Holly leafminer (Phytomyza ilicis)
37
Q

Describe and give an example of island-mainland dynamics

A
  • Edith’s checkerspot (Euphydras Editha)
  • mainland extinction rate is always = 0
  • island population, in a spatial sense, can be deemed immortal
38
Q

Describe source-sink dynamics

A
  • source is the net exporter of individuals
  • does not receive immigrants, but provides a lot of emigrants
  • persistence of the sink can only be explained by its high immigration from the source, otherwise its population would decline towards extinction
  • cannot support a barrier being inplaced
39
Q

Describe a sink populations

A

always exhibits a mortality greater than its natality

40
Q

Give an example of source-sink dynamics

A
  • seed-plant (Cakile edentyka), Sea Ricket populations that live close to the tidelines and require a constant input of seeds near the high watermark
  • beach source and dune sink