Data from: Density-dependent fitness, not dispersal movements, drives temporal variation in spatial genetic structure in dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis)
Some studies have found that dispersal rates and distances increase with density, indicating that density-dependent dispersal likely affects spatial genetic structure. In an 11-year mark-recapture study on a passerine, the dark-eyed junco, we tested whether density affected dispersal distance and/or...
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Zusammenfassung: | Some studies have found that dispersal rates and distances increase with
density, indicating that density-dependent dispersal likely affects
spatial genetic structure. In an 11-year mark-recapture study on a
passerine, the dark-eyed junco, we tested whether density affected
dispersal distance and/or fine-scale spatial genetic structure. Contrary
to expectations, we found no effect of pre-dispersal density on dispersal
distance or the proportion of locally-produced juveniles returning to the
population from which they hatched. However, even though density did not
affect dispersal distance or natal return rates, we found that density
still did affect spatial genetic structure. We found significant positive
spatial genetic structure at low densities of (post-dispersal) adults but
not at high densities. In years with high post-dispersal (adult) densities
that also had high pre-dispersal (juvenile) densities in the previous
year, we found negative spatial genetic structure, indicating high levels
of dispersal. We found that density also affected fitness of recruits, and
fitness of immigrants, potentially linking these population parameters
with the spatial genetic structure detected. Immigrants and recruits
rarely nested in low post-dispersal density years. In contrast, in years
with high post-dispersal density, recruits were common and immigrants had
equal success to local birds, so novel genotypes diluted the gene pool and
effectively eliminated positive spatial genetic structure. In relation to
fine-scale spatial genetic structure, fitness of immigrants and new
recruits is poorly understood compared to dispersal movements, but we
conclude that it can have implications for the spatial distribution of
genotypes in populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.85kc60b |