Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution

Bagawade R, van Benthem K, Wittmann M (2024)
Ecology and Evolution 14(1): e10799.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
OA 5.82 MB
Abstract / Bemerkung
Habitat loss (HL) is a major cause of species extinctions. Although the effects of HL beyond the directly impacted area have been previously observed, they have not been modelled explicitly, especially in an eco-evolutionary context. To start filling this gap, we study a two-patch deterministic consumer-resource model, with one of the patches experiencing loss of resources as a special case of HL. Our model allows foraging and mating within a patch as well as between patches. We then introduce heritable variation in consumer traits related to resource utilization and patch use to investigate eco-evolutionary dynamics and compare results with constant and no trait variation scenarios. Our results show that HL in one patch can indeed reduce consumer densities in the neighbouring patch but can also increase consumer densities in the neighbouring patch when the resources are overexploited. Yet at the landscape scale, the effect of HL on consumer densities is consistently negative. Patch isolation increases consumer density in the patch experiencing HL but has generally negative effects on the neighbouring patch, with context-dependent results at the landscape scale. With high cross-patch dependence and coupled foraging and mating preferences, local HL can sometimes even lead to landscape-level consumer extinction. Eco-evolutionary dynamics can rescue consumers from such extinction in some cases if their death rates are sufficiently small. More generally, trait evolution had positive or negative effects on equilibrium consumer densities after HL, depending on the evolving trait and the spatial scale considered. In summary, our findings show that HL at a local scale can affect the neighbouring patch and the landscape as a whole, where heritable trait variation can, in some cases, alleviate the impact of HL. We thus suggest joint consideration of multiple spatial scales and trait variation when assessing and predicting the impacts of HL. © 2024 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
Ecology and Evolution
Band
14
Ausgabe
1
Art.-Nr.
e10799
eISSN
2045-7758
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Universität Bielefeld im Rahmen des DEAL-Vertrags gefördert.
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2986083

Zitieren

Bagawade R, van Benthem K, Wittmann M. Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution. Ecology and Evolution. 2024;14(1): e10799.
Bagawade, R., van Benthem, K., & Wittmann, M. (2024). Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution. Ecology and Evolution, 14(1), e10799. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10799
Bagawade, Rishabh, van Benthem, Koen, and Wittmann, Meike. 2024. “Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution”. Ecology and Evolution 14 (1): e10799.
Bagawade, R., van Benthem, K., and Wittmann, M. (2024). Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution. Ecology and Evolution 14:e10799.
Bagawade, R., van Benthem, K., & Wittmann, M., 2024. Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution. Ecology and Evolution, 14(1): e10799.
R. Bagawade, K. van Benthem, and M. Wittmann, “Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution”, Ecology and Evolution, vol. 14, 2024, : e10799.
Bagawade, R., van Benthem, K., Wittmann, M.: Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution. Ecology and Evolution. 14, : e10799 (2024).
Bagawade, Rishabh, van Benthem, Koen, and Wittmann, Meike. “Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and the role of trait evolution”. Ecology and Evolution 14.1 (2024): e10799.
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2024-02-23T08:02:17Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
91c374c45f3be790a4c6b1136ff51c8d


Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 38187921
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar