4.5 Article

Landscape influences on dispersal behaviour: a theoretical model and empirical test using the fire salamander, Salamandra infraimmaculata

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 175, Issue 2, Pages 509-520

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-014-2924-8

Keywords

Circuit theory; Isolation by distance; Isolation by resistance; Landscape genetics; Least cost path

Categories

Funding

  1. Israel National Parks Authority [2009/36565]
  2. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [961-2008]
  3. Academy of Finland Grant
  4. University of Haifa
  5. ISF grant
  6. National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis, an institute sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF)
  7. US Department of Homeland Security
  8. US Department of Agriculture through NSF [EF-0832858]
  9. University of Tennessee, Knoxville
  10. Deutsch-Israel [BL 1271/1-1]
  11. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  12. Direct For Biological Sciences [1300426] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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When populations reside within a heterogeneous landscape, isolation by distance may not be a good predictor of genetic divergence if dispersal behaviour and therefore gene flow depend on landscape features. Commonly used approaches linking landscape features to gene flow include the least cost path (LCP), random walk (RW), and isolation by resistance (IBR) models. However, none of these models is likely to be the most appropriate for all species and in all environments. We compared the performance of LCP, RW and IBR models of dispersal with the aid of simulations conducted on artificially generated landscapes. We also applied each model to empirical data on the landscape genetics of the endangered fire salamander, Salamandra infraimmaculata, in northern Israel, where conservation planning requires an understanding of the dispersal corridors. Our simulations demonstrate that wide dispersal corridors of the low-cost environment facilitate dispersal in the IBR model, but inhibit dispersal in the RW model. In our empirical study, IBR explained the genetic divergence better than the LCP and RW models (partial Mantel correlation 0.413 for IBR, compared to 0.212 for LCP, and 0.340 for RW). Overall dispersal cost in salamanders was also well predicted by landscape feature slope steepness (76 %), and elevation (24 %). We conclude that fire salamander dispersal is well characterised by IBR predictions. Together with our simulation findings, these results indicate that wide dispersal corridors facilitate, rather than hinder, salamander dispersal. Comparison of genetic data to dispersal model outputs can be a useful technique in inferring dispersal behaviour from population genetic data.

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