Flight capacity increases then declines from the core to the margins of an invasive species’ range

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Abstract

Individuals that disperse farther than other individuals are more likely to be on the frontlines of spreading populations and may be more likely to mate with one another as a consequence of their spatial proximity. Over generations, this process—known as spatial sorting—can produce patterns of increasing dispersal ability from a population’s core towards the spreading front. By contrast, when the spread of a population is limited by the availability of suitable habitat, theory predicts that range boundaries can select against more dispersive phenotypes and produce patterns of decreasing dispersal capacity towards population margins. In a common garden study of invasive kudzu bugs (Megacopta cribraria)—which are limited by the availability of hostplants in their southern and western margins—I show that midrange individuals fly 49% farther than individuals in the core and 37% farther than individuals at margins. This result highlights that other processes, such as maternal effects or selection at range boundaries, may create more complicated patterns of dispersal ability across landscapes than predicted by models of spatial sorting alone.

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APA

Merwin, A. C. (2019). Flight capacity increases then declines from the core to the margins of an invasive species’ range. Biology Letters, 15(11). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2019.0496

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