Integrating learning into animal range dynamics under rapid human‐induced environmental change

Author:

Aben Job1234ORCID,Travis Justin M. J.5ORCID,Van Dyck Hans6ORCID,Vanwambeke Sophie O.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Earth and Climate Research Earth and Life Institute UCLouvain, Louvain‐la‐Neuve Belgium

2. Laboratoire Écologie, Systématique et Évolution Université Paris‐Saclay, CNRS, AgroParisTech Gif‐sur‐Yvette France

3. CentraleSupélec, ENS Paris‐Saclay, CNRS, LMPS—Laboratoire de Mécanique Paris‐Saclay Université Paris‐Saclay Gif‐sur‐Yvette France

4. Evolutionary Ecology Group, Department of Biology University of Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

5. The Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Aberdeen Aberdeen UK

6. Behavioural Ecology and Conservation Group Earth & Life Institute UCLouvain Belgium

Abstract

AbstractHuman‐induced rapid environmental change (HIREC) is creating environments deviating considerably from natural habitats in which species evolved. Concurrently, climate warming is pushing species’ climatic envelopes to geographic regions that offer novel ecological conditions. The persistence of species is likely affected by the interplay between the degree of ecological novelty and phenotypic plasticity, which in turn may shape an organism's range‐shifting ability. Current modelling approaches that forecast animal ranges are characterized by a static representation of the relationship between habitat use and fitness, which may bias predictions under conditions imposed by HIREC. We argue that accounting for dynamic species‐resource relationships can increase the ecological realism of range shift predictions. Our rationale builds on the concepts of ecological fitting, the process whereby individuals form successful novel biotic associations based on the suite of traits they carry at the time of encountering the novel condition, and behavioural plasticity, in particular learning. These concepts have revolutionized our view on fitness in novel ecological settings, and the way these processes may influence species ranges under HIREC. We have integrated them into a model of range expansion as a conceptual proof of principle highlighting the potentially substantial role of learning ability in range shifts under HIREC.

Publisher

Wiley

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