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Heritability of dispersal in banner-tailed kangaroo rats, Dipodomys spectabilis
Authors:Peter M. Waser  W. Thomas Jones
Affiliation:Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, U.S.A.
Abstract:In a wild population of banner-tailed kangaroo rats, heritability of dispersal was estimated using two measures of dispersal tendency: distance moved from the natal site and likelihood of leaving the natal home range. Neither of the heritability measures was significantly different from 0. The results indicate that the main causes of variation in dispersal behaviour in this species are environmental, and suggest that there is no class of ‘innate’ dispersers. The possibility cannot be excluded that this population retains modest additive genetic variance for dispersal tendency. The survival consequences of dispersal in kangaroo rats are known to depend on population density and to change significantly between years, so that selection should maintain genetic variation in dispersal tendencies. Modest genetic variation for dispersal tendencies, especially if dispersal is a conditional trait, will be extremely difficult to detect in field studies.
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