TY - JOUR
T1 - Altered natal dispersal at the range periphery
T2 - The role of behavior, resources, and maternal condition
AU - Merrick, Melissa J.
AU - Koprowski, John L.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Mt. Graham Red Squirrel Research Program for assistance and financial support from the USDA Forest Service, University of Arizona Agricultural Experiment Station and grants to MJM from The Joint Fire Sciences Program Graduate Research Innovations award # 3005940, The University of Arizona NASA Space Grant Consortium Fellowship, The University of Arizona Institute of the Environment Carson Scholars Fellowship, The American Society of Mammalogists Grant in Aid of Research and ASM Fellowship, The American Museum of Natural History Theodore Roosevelt Graduate Student Research Award, The Southwestern Association of Naturalists Howard McCarley Student Research Award, and T & E Inc. Grants for Conservation Biology. All field work was conducted under University of Arizona Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee protocol # 08-024, Arizona Game and Fish Department scientific collecting permit # SP654189, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service permit # TE041875-0, and adhered to the American Society of Mammalogists guidelines for the use of wild mammals in research (Sikes & Gannon,). This manuscript was improved by comments from R. W. Mannan, C. Conway, D. Guertin, M. Altemus, H. Chen, J. Derbridge, V. Greer, M. Mazzella, and two anonymous reviewers.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2017/1/1
Y1 - 2017/1/1
N2 - Natal dispersal outcomes are an interplay between environmental conditions and individual phenotypes. Peripheral, isolated populations may experience altered environmental conditions and natal dispersal patterns that differ from populations in contiguous landscapes. We document nonphilopatric, sex-biased natal dispersal in an endangered small mammal, the Mt. Graham red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus grahamensis), restricted to a single mountain. Other North American red squirrel populations are shown to have sex-unbiased, philopatric natal dispersal. We ask what environmental and intrinsic factors may be driving this atypical natal dispersal pattern. We test for the influence of proximate factors and ultimate drivers of natal dispersal: habitat fragmentation, local population density, individual behavior traits, inbreeding avoidance, competition for mates, and competition for resources, allowing us to better understand altered natal dispersal patterns at the periphery of a species’ range. A juvenile squirrel's body condition and its mother's mass in spring (a reflection of her intrinsic quality and territory quality) contribute to individual behavioral tendencies for movement and exploration. Resources, behavior, and body condition have the strongest influence on natal dispersal distance, but affect males and females differently. Male natal dispersal distance is positively influenced by its mother's spring body mass and individual tendency for movement; female natal dispersal distance is negatively influenced by its mother's spring body mass and positively influenced by individual tendency for movement. An apparent feedback between environmental variables and subsequent juvenile behavioral state contributes to an altered natal dispersal pattern in a peripheral population, highlighting the importance of studying ecological processes at the both range center and periphery of species’ distributions.
AB - Natal dispersal outcomes are an interplay between environmental conditions and individual phenotypes. Peripheral, isolated populations may experience altered environmental conditions and natal dispersal patterns that differ from populations in contiguous landscapes. We document nonphilopatric, sex-biased natal dispersal in an endangered small mammal, the Mt. Graham red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus grahamensis), restricted to a single mountain. Other North American red squirrel populations are shown to have sex-unbiased, philopatric natal dispersal. We ask what environmental and intrinsic factors may be driving this atypical natal dispersal pattern. We test for the influence of proximate factors and ultimate drivers of natal dispersal: habitat fragmentation, local population density, individual behavior traits, inbreeding avoidance, competition for mates, and competition for resources, allowing us to better understand altered natal dispersal patterns at the periphery of a species’ range. A juvenile squirrel's body condition and its mother's mass in spring (a reflection of her intrinsic quality and territory quality) contribute to individual behavioral tendencies for movement and exploration. Resources, behavior, and body condition have the strongest influence on natal dispersal distance, but affect males and females differently. Male natal dispersal distance is positively influenced by its mother's spring body mass and individual tendency for movement; female natal dispersal distance is negatively influenced by its mother's spring body mass and positively influenced by individual tendency for movement. An apparent feedback between environmental variables and subsequent juvenile behavioral state contributes to an altered natal dispersal pattern in a peripheral population, highlighting the importance of studying ecological processes at the both range center and periphery of species’ distributions.
KW - Tamiasciurus hudsonicus grahamensis
KW - behavioral phenotype
KW - condition-dependent dispersal
KW - maternal effects
KW - peripheral population
KW - phenotype-dependent dispersal
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U2 - 10.1002/ece3.2612
DO - 10.1002/ece3.2612
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85006132384
SN - 2045-7758
VL - 7
SP - 58
EP - 72
JO - Ecology and Evolution
JF - Ecology and Evolution
IS - 1
ER -