Literature DB >> 30397109

Habitat choice meets thermal specialization: Competition with specialists may drive suboptimal habitat preferences in generalists.

Staffan Jacob1,2, Estelle Laurent3, Bart Haegeman2,4, Romain Bertrand2,4, Jérôme G Prunier2, Delphine Legrand2, Julien Cote5, Alexis S Chaine2,6, Michel Loreau2,4, Jean Clobert2, Nicolas Schtickzelle3.   

Abstract

Limited dispersal is classically considered as a prerequisite for ecological specialization to evolve, such that generalists are expected to show greater dispersal propensity compared with specialists. However, when individuals choose habitats that maximize their performance instead of dispersing randomly, theory predicts dispersal with habitat choice to evolve in specialists, while generalists should disperse more randomly. We tested whether habitat choice is associated with thermal niche specialization using microcosms of the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila, a species that performs active dispersal. We found that thermal specialists preferred optimal habitats as predicted by theory, a link that should make specialists more likely to track suitable conditions under environmental changes than expected under the random dispersal assumption. Surprisingly, generalists also performed habitat choice but with a preference for suboptimal habitats. Since this result challenges current theory, we developed a metapopulation model to understand under which circumstances such a preference for suboptimal habitats should evolve. We showed that competition between generalists and specialists may favor a preference for niche margins in generalists under environmental variability. Our results demonstrate that the behavioral dimension of dispersal-here, habitat choice-fundamentally alters our predictions of how dispersal evolve with niche specialization, making dispersal behaviors crucial for ecological forecasting facing environmental changes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  dispersal; ecological niche; habitat matching; informed decision; niche margin

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30397109      PMCID: PMC6255147          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1805574115

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


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