The significance of partial migration for food web and ecosystem dynamics

Ecol Lett. 2023 Jan;26(1):3-22. doi: 10.1111/ele.14143. Epub 2022 Nov 28.

Abstract

Migration is ubiquitous and can strongly shape food webs and ecosystems. Less familiar, however, is that the majority of life cycle, seasonal and diel migrations in nature are partial migrations: only a fraction of the population migrates while the other individuals remain in their resident ecosystem. Here, we demonstrate different impacts of partial migration rendering it fundamental to our understanding of the significance of migration for food web and ecosystem dynamics. First, partial migration affects the spatiotemporal distribution of individuals and the food web and ecosystem-level processes they drive differently than expected under full migration. Second, whether an individual migrates or not is regularly correlated with morphological, physiological, and/or behavioural traits that shape its food-web and ecosystem-level impacts. Third, food web and ecosystem dynamics can drive the fraction of the population migrating, enabling the potential for feedbacks between the causes and consequences of migration within and across ecosystems. These impacts, individually and in combination, can yield unintuitive effects of migration and drive the dynamics, diversity and functions of ecosystems. By presenting the first full integration of partial migration and trophic (meta-)community and (meta-)ecosystem ecology, we provide a roadmap for studying how migration affects and is affected by ecosystem dynamics in a changing world.

Keywords: dispersal; eco-evolutionary dynamics; ecosystem processes; foraging; meta-ecosystem; nutrient cycling; resource flow; spatial subsidies; traits; trophic interactions.

MeSH terms

  • Ecology
  • Ecosystem*
  • Food Chain*
  • Humans