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Limited dispersal and its effect on population structure in the milkweed beetle Tetraopes tetraophthalmus
Authors:David E McCauley  James R Ott  Amy Stine  Sharon McGrath
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Vanderbilt University, 37235 Nashville, Tennessee, USA;(2) Department of Zoology, North Carolina State University, 27611 Raleigh, North Carolina, USA;(3) Mountain Lake Biological Station, Route 1, 24136 Pembroke, Virginia, USA
Abstract:Summary The movement patterns of adult milkweed beetles, Tetraopes tetraphthalmus, were monitored via a mark-recapture technique. Movement or dispersal patterns were studied in two natural populations, one in which the host plant, Asclepias syriaca, was nearly continuously distributed over a 250×90 m area and another where Asclepias was distributed in 17 small discrete patches. In both populations dispersal distances resulting from the flight patterns of the adult beetles were quite short, averaging less than 40 m from the point of first encounter 10 days after marking. Males were shown to be more vagile than females. The distribution of dispersal distances collected from one of the populations was fit to three statistical distributions cited in the literature as expected from dispersal by many small-scale movements or observed in other species. It was found that an equation describing an exponential decay gave the best statistical fit to the data collected here for milkweed beetles. The data is discussed in the context of the effects of the limited dispersal power of the beetles and the distribution of suitable habitat on the population structure of Tetraopes.
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