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Fortune favours the brave: Movement responses shape demographic dynamics in strongly competing populations

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journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-10, 14:56 authored by Jonathan R. Potts, Sergei V. Petrovskii
Animal movement is a key mechanism for shaping population dynamics. The effect of interactions between competing animals on a population's survival has been studied for many decades. However, interactions also affect an animal's subsequent movement decisions. Despite this, the indirect effect of these decisions on animal survival is much less well-understood. Here, we incorporate movement responses to foreign animals into a model of two competing populations, where inter-specific competition is greater than intra-specific competition. When movement is diffusive, the travelling wave moves from the stronger population to the weaker. However, by incorporating behaviourally induced directed movement towards the stronger population, the weaker one can slow the travelling wave down, even reversing its direction. Hence movement responses can switch the predictions of traditional mechanistic models. Furthermore, when environmental heterogeneity is combined with aggressive movement strategies, it is possible for spatially segregated co-existence to emerge. In this situation, the spatial patterns of the competing populations have the unusual feature that they are slightly out-of-phase with the environmental patterns. Finally, incorporating dynamic movement responses can also enable stable co-existence in a homogeneous environment, giving a new mechanism for spatially segregated co-existence.

History

Citation

Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2017, 420, pp. 190-199

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Mathematics

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Theoretical Biology

Publisher

Elsevier for Academic Press

issn

0022-5193

eissn

1095-8541

Acceptance date

2017-03-10

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2018-03-06

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002251931730125X

Notes

The file associated with this record is embargoed until 12 months after the date of publication. The final published version may be available through the links above. Following the embargo period the above license applies.

Language

en

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