Sex-biased natal dispersal is widespread, and its significance remains a central question in evolutionary biology. However, theory so far fails to predict some of the most common patterns found in nature. To address this, we present novel results from an individual-based model investigating the joint roles of inbreeding load, demographic stochasticity, environmental stochasticity, and dispersal costs for the evolution of sex-biased dispersal. Most strikingly, we found that male-biased natal dispersal evolved in polygynous systems as a result of the interplay between inbreeding avoidance and stochasticity, whereas previous theory, in contrast to empirical observations, predicted male philopatry and female-biased natal dispersal under inbreed...
There is growing interest in resolving the curious disconnect between the fields of kin selection an...
Population viscosity has been proposed as an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperation. T...
Natal sex-biased dispersal has long been thought to reduce the risk of inbreeding by spatially separ...
Inbreeding avoidance and asymmetric competition over resources have both been identified as factors ...
Inbreeding depression, asymmetries in costs or benefits of dispersal, and the mating system have bee...
Abstract: Inbreeding avoidance and asymmetric competition over resources have both been identified a...
International audienceDispersal is central in ecology and evolution because it influences population...
Acknowledgments We thank G. Bocedi, S. Palmer, and three anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on...
Using game theory, we developed a kin-selection model to investigate the consequences of local compe...
International audienceThe relation between mating system and sex-biased dispersal has been debated f...
Although dispersal requires context-dependent decision-making in three distinct stages (emigration, ...
Sex-biased dispersal is a much-discussed feature in literature on dispersal. Diverse hypotheses have...
Sex-specific dispersal behavior has been documented in a wide range of different species. Avoidance ...
Sex-biased dispersal is an almost ubiquitous feature of mammalian life history, but the evolutionary...
Using analytical tools from game theory, we investigate the relevance of a series of hypotheses conc...
There is growing interest in resolving the curious disconnect between the fields of kin selection an...
Population viscosity has been proposed as an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperation. T...
Natal sex-biased dispersal has long been thought to reduce the risk of inbreeding by spatially separ...
Inbreeding avoidance and asymmetric competition over resources have both been identified as factors ...
Inbreeding depression, asymmetries in costs or benefits of dispersal, and the mating system have bee...
Abstract: Inbreeding avoidance and asymmetric competition over resources have both been identified a...
International audienceDispersal is central in ecology and evolution because it influences population...
Acknowledgments We thank G. Bocedi, S. Palmer, and three anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on...
Using game theory, we developed a kin-selection model to investigate the consequences of local compe...
International audienceThe relation between mating system and sex-biased dispersal has been debated f...
Although dispersal requires context-dependent decision-making in three distinct stages (emigration, ...
Sex-biased dispersal is a much-discussed feature in literature on dispersal. Diverse hypotheses have...
Sex-specific dispersal behavior has been documented in a wide range of different species. Avoidance ...
Sex-biased dispersal is an almost ubiquitous feature of mammalian life history, but the evolutionary...
Using analytical tools from game theory, we investigate the relevance of a series of hypotheses conc...
There is growing interest in resolving the curious disconnect between the fields of kin selection an...
Population viscosity has been proposed as an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperation. T...
Natal sex-biased dispersal has long been thought to reduce the risk of inbreeding by spatially separ...