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Kortessis, N., Glass, G., Gonzalez, A., Ruktanonchai, N. W., Simon, M. W., Singer, B., & Holt, R. D. (2025). Metapopulations, the inflationary effect, and consequences for public health. The American Naturalist, 205(3).
ABSTRACT: The metapopulation concept offers significant explanatory power in ecology and evolutionary biology. Metapopulations, a set of spatially distributed populations linked by dispersal, and their community and ecosystem level analogs, metacommunity and meta-ecosystem models, tend to be more stable regionally than locally. This fact is largely attributable to the interplay of spatiotemporal heterogeneity and dispersal (the inflationary effect). We highlight this underappreciated (but essential) role of spatiotemporal heterogeneity in metapopulation biology, present a novel expression for quantifying and defining the inflationary effect, and provide a mechanistic interpretation of how it arises and impacts population growth and abundance. We illustrate the effect with examples from infectious disease dynamics, including the hypothesis that policy decisions made during theCOVID-19 pandemic generated spatiotemporal heterogeneity that enhanced the spread of disease. We finish by noting how spatiotemporal heterogeneity generates emergent population processes at large scales across many topics in the history of ecology, as diverse as natural enemy–victim dynamics, species coexistence, and conservation biology. Embracing the complexity of spatiotemporal heterogeneity is vital for future research on the persistence of populations.
For a shorter version of the paper, read this University of Florida blog.