The rescue effect and inference from isolation-extinction relationships

Ecol Lett. 2020 Apr;23(4):598-606. doi: 10.1111/ele.13460. Epub 2020 Jan 25.

Abstract

The rescue effect in metapopulations hypothesises that less isolated patches are unlikely to go extinct because recolonisation may occur between breeding seasons ('recolonisation rescue'), or immigrants may sufficiently bolster population size to prevent extinction altogether ('demographic rescue'). These mechanisms have rarely been demonstrated directly, and most evidence of the rescue effect is from relationships between isolation and extinction. We determined the frequency of recolonisation rescue for metapopulations of black rails (Laterallus jamaicensis) and Virginia rails (Rallus limicola) from occupancy surveys conducted during and between breeding seasons, and assessed the reliability of inferences about the occurrence of rescue drawn from isolation-extinction relationships, including autologistic isolation measures that corrected for unsurveyed patches and imperfect detection. Recolonisation rescue occurred at expected rates, but was elevated during periods of disturbance that resulted in non-equilibrium metapopulation dynamics. Inferences from extinction-isolation relationships were unreliable, particularly for autologistic measures and for the more vagile Virginia rail.

Keywords: Autologistic; Virginia rail; black rail; dispersal; isolation; metapopulation; occupancy; rescue effect; wetland.

Publication types

  • Letter

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Birds*
  • Ecosystem
  • Models, Biological*
  • Population Density
  • Population Dynamics
  • Reproducibility of Results