| Literature DB >> 32099656 |
Abstract
Animal movement comes in a variety of 'types' including small foraging movements, larger one-way dispersive movements, seasonally-predictable round-trip migratory movements, and erratic nomadic movements. Although most individuals move at some point throughout their lives, movement patterns can vary widely across individuals within the same species: differing within an individual over time (intra-individual), among individuals in the same population (inter-individual), or among populations (inter-population). Yet, studies of movement (theoretical and empirical alike) more often focus on understanding 'typical' movement patterns than understanding variation in movement. Here, I synthesize current knowledge of movement variation (drawing parallels across species and movement types), describing the causes (what factors contribute to individual variation), patterns (what movement variation looks like), consequences (why variation matters), maintenance (why variation persists), implications (for management and conservation), and finally gaps (what pieces we are currently missing). By synthesizing across scales of variation, I span across work on plasticity, personality, and geographic variation. Individual movement can be driven by factors that act at the individual, population, community and ecosystem level and have ramifications at each of these levels. Generally the consequences of movement are less well understood than the causes, in part because the effects of movement variation are often nested, with variation manifesting at the population level, which in turn affects communities and ecosystems. Understanding both cause and consequence is particularly important for predicting when variation begets variation in a positive feedback loop, versus when a negative feedback causes variation to be dampened successively. Finally, maintaining standing variation in movement may be important for facilitating species' ability to respond to future environmental change.Entities:
Keywords: Context-dependent; Dispersal kernel; Environmental change; Foraging ecology; Movement ecology; Nomadism; Partial migration; Personality; Plasticity; Population dynamics; Range expansion; Sex-biased dispersal
Year: 2020 PMID: 32099656 PMCID: PMC7027015 DOI: 10.1186/s40462-020-0197-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mov Ecol ISSN: 2051-3933 Impact factor: 3.600
Fig. 1Schematic of the causes, patterns and consequences of movement variation. a External factors (environment) are perceived by an individual, and taken in combination with its genotype, internal state and history to determine the movement response, (b) movement can vary along three ‘axes’ (whether to move, when to move, and where to move), and (c) movement first impacts the individual before potentially scaling up to affect the population, community and ecosystem. While causes often act in parallel, consequences are typically nested. Variation in any of the causes (or their interaction) can contribute to variation in movement, and moving in turn can feed back to affect variation if a consequence of moving is increasing variation in the causes of movement (positive feedback, solid arrow) or decreasing said variation (negative feedback, dashed arrow)
Examples of species with different aspects of movement variation, their causes and consequences
| Movement types & System | Variation cause | Variation consequence |
|---|---|---|
Dispersal tendency. Western bluebird ( | Male western bluebirds differ consistently in their level of aggression, with dispersing males more aggressive than philopatric males. More aggressive males are also more likely to win in competitive interactions for territories (even in interactions with mountain bluebirds) but provide little parental care to their offspring (causing high offspring mortality). | Dispersing western bluebirds (who tend to be aggressive) are colonizing into mountain bluebird habitat, outcompeting them, and thus expanding the western bluebird range. Aggressive males are replaced over time by non-aggressive males who produce more surviving offspring and are thus at a selective advantage. |
Dispersal distance. Cane toads ( | Individuals on the edge of the population range (those that arrive earlier to a new area) move further each day and spend more time dispersing than toads in the center of the population range (those that arrive later). | The spatial assortment by dispersal ability, coupled with a genetic basis for dispersal in cane toads, has caused the population spread to accelerate over time. |
Foraging route. Bumble-bees ( | Each bee learns a specific trapline in a few hours, suggesting that different early experiences leads to individual differences in trapline routes. | Bee foraging behavior influences pollination patterns; traplining increases pollen dispersal distance compared to local foraging. |
Foraging habitat selection. Spadefoot toad tadpoles ( | Tadpoles prefer food associated with their natal habitat/diet. | Related tadpoles with the same natal habitat prefer the same food, leading to associate with kin even in the absence of explicit recognition. |
Migration frequency. Pacific leatherback turtles ( | Remigration interval (the number of years between successive migrations) varies with local foraging conditions. La Niña years (lower sea surface temperatures) increase the upwelling of nutrient-rich water, leading to faster acquisition of resources for breeding and thus shorter remigration intervals. | Variable remigration intervals leads to variation in annual egg production at the population level. |
Migration tendency. Roach ( | Individuals with higher body condition are more likely to migrate into streams, foregoing further foraging opportunities in exchange for lower predation risk, while starved fish are more likely to remain in lakes, prioritizing access to food. | Changes in the number of fish migrating from year to year change the predation pressure on zooplankton in lakes, altering zooplankton size structure. Fewer migrating fish lead to a later peak in zooplankton biomass, thus shifting seasonal dynamics of both zooplankton and phytoplankton. |
Fig. 2Individual differences in movement can occur at several scales. Each line represent one individual that displays one of two different movement behaviors (A or B) across each of two years, for two different populations. Differences can occur (a) within the same individual over time, (b) among individuals within a population, or (c) among populations of individuals