Very few experimental studies have examined how migration rate affects metapopulation dynamics and stability. We studied the dynamics of replicate laboratory metapopulations of Drosophila under different migration rates. Low migration stabilized metapopulation dynamics, while promoting unstable subpopulation dynamics, by inducing asynchrony among neighboring subpopulations. High migration synchronized subpopulation dynamics, thereby destabilizing the metapopulations. Contrary to some theoretical predictions, increased migration did not affect average population size. Simulations based on a simple non-species-specific population growth model captured most features of the data, which suggests that our results are generalizable. N atural populations often exhibit some degree of spatial structuring into metapopulations: ensembles of local populations (subpopulations) connected by migration (1). The effects of migration rate on the dynamics and stability of metapopulations have been extensively investigated theoretically (1). Analytical (2, 3) and simulation (4) studies have shown that even a simple system, consisting of two subpopulations (modeled by a pair of logistic maps) with a constant rate of to-and-fro migration, can exhibit rich dynamic behavior. In such systems, low, intermediate, and high migration rates have been shown to lead to complex, stable, and unstable dynamics, respectively (2-4). Similar results have been obtained with a variety of more realistic models (5-8). Potential stabilizing effects of migration have also been shown in studies on more complex systems (9-12). Although it has been empirically shown that migration can stabilize dynamics (13, 14), most metapopulation experiments have been carried out within the classical extinction-recolonization framework (15), which ignores the dynamics of population size. Thus, rigorous tests of theoretical predictions regarding the effects of migration rate on metapopulation dynamics are rare (13). Similarly, despite a large corpus of theoretical studies (16-18), the effects of migration rates on mean population size have rarely been investigated experimentally (19).Here, we report the effects of low (10%) and high (30%) migration rates on the dynamics of replicated laboratory metapopulations of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster in a 21-generation experiment (20). We quantified constancy stability (21) of the metapopulations and subpopulations with the use of a dimensionless measure of amplitude of fluctuation in population size over time (22). This statistic, which we call the fluctuation index (FI), is inversely related to stability. We also performed simulations (20) using a simple non-Drosophila-specific model to test whether the results reflect a simple effect of migration rates on typical population dynamics, or are due to some specific features of the life history and ecology of Drosophila cultures.Metapopulations with low levels of migration (henceforth LMMs) had lower FI values for metapopulation size than did either the control metapopulation...