Measuring dispersal in a metapopulation using stable isotope enrichment: high rates of sex-biased disperal between patches in a mayfly population
Abstract
Dispersal affects a wide array of ecological and evolutionary processes, but has been difficult to estimate empirically. A 15 Nitrogen stable isotope enrichment technique was used to passively mark all developing Callibaetis ferrugineus hageni (Eaton) mayfly larvae in a beaver pond that had previously been shown to be a patch in a source‐sink metapopulation. After enrichment during the larval stages, dispersal among ponds by adult females was demonstrated by the presence of unmarked females ovipositing in the labeled pond, and marked females in an unlabeled pond. Observed frequencies of marked females suggested incomplete mixing between ponds. In contrast, males rarely dispersed from their natal pond, which was consistent with the unusual mating system in this species – adult Callibaetis are short‐lived, do not feed, and females are sexually receptive immediately after emerging from the larval habitat. The frequent dispersal demonstrated using the stable isotope technique was a critical component of the source‐sink dynamic observed in this metapopulation, and further use of this technique will provide insights into patterns of dispersal in spatially structured habitats.
Local Knowledge Graph (13 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Empirical evidence for nonselective recruitment and a source-sink dynamic in a mayfly metapopulation
The mating biology of a mass-swarming mayfly
Hydrologic and behavioral constraints on oviposition of stream insects: implications for adult dispersal
Data from: Lifetime fitness, sex-specific life history, and the maintenance of a polyphenism
Dispersal of pollen analogue by Valeriana edulis pollinators
Data from: Extreme site fidelity as an optimal strategy in an unpredictable and homogeneous environment
A New Hydrologic Perspective of How Beaver Ponds Function
Small Mammals: A Beaver Pond Ecosystem and Adjacent Riparian Habitat in Idaho
Beaver Pond Ecosystems and Their Relationships to Multi-Use Natural Resource Management
Cited By (69 times, 4 in Knowledge Hub)
Effects of Native and Non-native Predators on Aquatic Communities
Trout predators and demographic sources and sinks in a mayfly metapopulation
Empirical evidence for nonselective recruitment and a source-sink dynamic in a mayfly metapopulation
Lack of appropriate behavioral or development responses by mayfly larvae to trout predators
References (35)
2 in Knowledge Hub, 33 external
