Eco-evolutionary dynamics and collective dispersal: implications for salmon metapopulation robustness
Justin D. Yeakel, Jean P. Gibert, Peter A. H. Westley, Jonathan W., Moore

TL;DR
This study models eco-evolutionary dynamics in salmon metapopulations, revealing how dispersal rates and habitat heterogeneity influence population stability and resilience, with implications for conservation strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking dispersal, local adaptation, and population robustness, highlighting the nonlinear effects of dispersal on metapopulation stability.
Findings
Intermediate dispersal enhances robustness.
Habitat heterogeneity's effect depends on dispersal rate.
Density-dependent dispersal promotes resilience.
Abstract
The spatial dispersal of individuals is known to play an important role in the dynamics of populations, and is central to metapopulation theory. At the same time, local adaptation to environmental conditions creates a geographic mosaic of evolutionary forces, where the combined drivers of selection and gene flow interact. Although the dispersal of individuals from donor to recipient populations provides connections within the metapopulation, promoting demographic and evolutionary rescue, it may also introduce maladapted individuals into habitats host to different environmental conditions, potentially lowering the fitness of the recipient population. Here we explore a model of the eco-evolutionary dynamics between two populations connected by dispersal, where the productivity of each is defined by a trait complex that is subject to local selection. Although general in nature, our model…
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