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Shifts from pulled to pushed range expansions caused by reduction of landscape connectivity

View ORCID ProfileMaxime Dahirel, Aline Bertin, Marjorie Haond, Aurélie Blin, Eric Lombaert, Vincent Calcagno, Simon Fellous, Ludovic Mailleret, Thibaut Malausa, Elodie Vercken
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.13.092775
Maxime Dahirel
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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  • ORCID record for Maxime Dahirel
  • For correspondence: maxime.dahirel@yahoo.fr
Aline Bertin
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Marjorie Haond
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Aurélie Blin
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Eric Lombaert
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Vincent Calcagno
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Simon Fellous
2CBGP, INRAE, CIRAD, IRD, Montpellier SupAgro, Univ Montpellier – Montpellier, France
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Ludovic Mailleret
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
3Université Côte d’Azur, INRIA, INRAE, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, BIOCORE – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Thibaut Malausa
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Elodie Vercken
1Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA – Sophia Antipolis, France
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Abstract

Range expansions are key processes shaping the distribution of species; their ecological and evolutionary dynamics have become especially relevant today, as human influence reshapes ecosystems worldwide. Many attempts to explain and predict range expansions assume, explicitly or implicitly, so-called “pulled” expansion dynamics, in which the low-density edge populations provide most of the “fuel” for the species advance. Some expansions, however, exhibit very different dynamics, with high-density populations behind the front “pushing” the expansion forward. These two types of expansions are predicted to have different effects on e.g. genetic diversity and habitat quality sensitivity. However, empirical studies are lacking due to the challenge of generating reliably pushed vs. pulled expansions in the laboratory, or discriminating them in the field. We here propose that manipulating the degree of connectivity among populations may prove a more generalizable way to create pushed expansions. We demonstrate this with individual-based simulations as well as replicated experimental range expansions (using the parasitoid wasp Trichogramma brassicae as model). By analyzing expansion velocities and neutral genetic diversity, we showed that reducing connectivity led to pushed dynamics. Low connectivity alone, i.e. without density-dependent dispersal, can only lead to “weakly pushed” expansions, where invasion speed conforms to pushed expectations, but the decline in genetic diversity does not. In empirical expansions however, low connectivity may in some cases also lead to adjustments to the dispersal-density function, recreating “classical” pushed expansions. In the current context of habitat loss and fragmentation, we need to better account for this relationship between connectivity and expansion regimes to successfully predict the ecological and evolutionary consequences of range expansions.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors declare they have no financial conflict of interest in relation with the content of this article. Several authors are recommenders for PCI (PCI Evol Biol: EL, VC, SF, TM, EV; PCI Ecology and PCI Zoology: EL, VC, EV).

Footnotes

  • Version 4 of this preprint has been peer-reviewed and recommended by Peer Community In Evolutionary Biology (https://doi.org/10.24072/pci.evolbiol.100118) This version is identical to version 4, except for the correction of a minor error in the Discussion: ‘dispersal was density-independent in Tribolium castaneum metapopulations with low connectivity, density-dependent in metapopulations with high connectivity’ should have been "dispersal was density-*dependent* in Tribolium castaneum metapopulations with low connectivity, density-*independent* in metapopulations with high connectivity"

  • https://github.com/mdahirel/pushed-pulled-2020-dynamics

  • https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3969988

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.
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Posted December 16, 2020.
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Shifts from pulled to pushed range expansions caused by reduction of landscape connectivity
Maxime Dahirel, Aline Bertin, Marjorie Haond, Aurélie Blin, Eric Lombaert, Vincent Calcagno, Simon Fellous, Ludovic Mailleret, Thibaut Malausa, Elodie Vercken
bioRxiv 2020.05.13.092775; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.13.092775
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Shifts from pulled to pushed range expansions caused by reduction of landscape connectivity
Maxime Dahirel, Aline Bertin, Marjorie Haond, Aurélie Blin, Eric Lombaert, Vincent Calcagno, Simon Fellous, Ludovic Mailleret, Thibaut Malausa, Elodie Vercken
bioRxiv 2020.05.13.092775; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.13.092775

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