Asymmetric Interactions Shape Survival During Population Range Expansions
Jason M. Gray, Rowan J. Barker-Clarke, Jacob G. Scott, Michael, Hinczewski

TL;DR
This study investigates how asymmetric ecological interactions influence the survival and spatial distribution of mutants during population range expansions, combining simulations and mathematical modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a mathematical model linking ecological interactions to mutant survival probability in expanding populations, validated by simulations.
Findings
Model agrees with simulations when mutant payoff is positive.
Spatial distribution of survival probabilities reveals interaction types.
The approach offers insights into ecological interactions from spatial data.
Abstract
An organism that is newly introduced into an existing population has a survival probability that is dependent on both the population density of its environment and the competition it experiences with the members of that population. Expanding populations naturally form regions of high and low density, and simultaneously experience ecological interactions both internally and at the boundary of their range. For this reason, systems of expanding populations are ideal for studying the combination of density and ecological effects. Conservation ecologists have been studying the ability of an invasive species to establish for some time, attributing success to both ecological and spatial factors. Similar behaviors have been observed in spatially structured cell populations, such as those found in cancerous tumors and bacterial biofilms. In these scenarios, novel organisms may be the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
