The FTA model is underpinned by
demographic and
ecological phenomena and processes such as the
Allee effect, gene surfing, high-density blocking, and
priority effects. Early colonizing lineages can reach high densities and thus hinder the success of late-arriving colonizers. It has been suggested that this can strongly influence spatial biodiversity patterns.
Scientific evidence for FTA processes has emerged from a variety of evolutionary, biogeographic, and ecological research areas. Examples include: the sectoring patterns sometimes evident in microbial colonies;
phylogeographic sectoring of lineages, inferred to have rapidly expanded into new terrain-following
deglaciation; the island progression rule; and sudden biological replacement (lineage turnover) following
extirpation. One possible scientific consequence of FTA dynamics is that
gene flow measures based on the genetics of contemporary high-density populations may underestimate actual rates of dispersal and
invasion potential. == See also ==