Ecological conditions favoring budding in colonial organisms under environmental disturbance.

Mayuko Nakamaru, Takenori Takada, Akiko Ohtsuki, Sayaki U Suzuki, Kanan Miura, Kazuki Tsuji
Author Information
  1. Mayuko Nakamaru: Department of Value and Decision Science, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan.
  2. Takenori Takada: Graduate School of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan.
  3. Akiko Ohtsuki: Department of Value and Decision Science, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan; The Graduate University for Advanced Studies, Kanagawa, Japan.
  4. Sayaki U Suzuki: Department of Value and Decision Science, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan; The Graduate University for Advanced Studies, Kanagawa, Japan.
  5. Kanan Miura: Department of Value and Decision Science, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan.
  6. Kazuki Tsuji: Faculty of Agriculture, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan.

Abstract

Dispersal is a topic of great interest in ecology. Many organisms adopt one of two distinct dispersal tactics at reproduction: the production of small offspring that can disperse over long distances (such as seeds and spawned eggs), or budding. The latter is observed in some colonial organisms, such as clonal plants, corals and ants, in which (super)organisms split their body into components of relatively large size that disperse to a short distance. Contrary to the common dispersal viewpoint, short-dispersal colonial organisms often flourish even in environments with frequent disturbances. In this paper, we investigate the conditions that favor budding over long-distance dispersal of small offspring, focusing on the life history of the colony growth and the colony division ratio. These conditions are the relatively high mortality of very small colonies, logistic growth, the ability of dispersers to peacefully seek and settle unoccupied spaces, and small spatial scale of environmental disturbance. If these conditions hold, budding is advantageous even when environmental disturbance is frequent. These results suggest that the demography or life history of the colony underlies the behaviors of the colonial organisms.

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MeSH Term

Animal Distribution
Animals
Ecological and Environmental Phenomena
Environment
Models, Statistical
Plant Dispersal
Probability
Reproduction
Spatial Analysis

Word Cloud

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