Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds

Abstract Background The life history strategy of a species can influence how populations of that species respond to environmental variation. In this study, we used a matrix modeling approach to examine how life history differences among sympatric rock and white-tailed ptarmigan affect the influence...

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Main Authors: Wilson, Scott, Martin, Kathy
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6785/12/9
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spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:1472-6785-12-9 2023-05-15T18:07:14+02:00 Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds Wilson, Scott Martin, Kathy 2012-06-29 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6785/12/9 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6785/12/9 Copyright 2012 Wilson and Martin; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Alpine Climate change Elasticity Life history variation Population growth Ptarmigan Reproductive effort Survival Research article 2012 ftbiomed 2012-09-15T23:55:04Z Abstract Background The life history strategy of a species can influence how populations of that species respond to environmental variation. In this study, we used a matrix modeling approach to examine how life history differences among sympatric rock and white-tailed ptarmigan affect the influence of demographic rates on population growth (λ) and the potential response to a changing climate. Rock ptarmigan have a slower life history strategy than white-tailed ptarmigan in the study region with lower annual reproductive effort but higher adult survival. Results Based on data from a 5-year field study, deterministic estimates of λ indicated that populations were stable for rock ptarmigan (λ = 1.01), but declining for white-tailed ptarmigan (λ = 0.96). The demographic rates with the highest elasticity for rock ptarmigan were the survival of after-second year females, followed by juvenile survival and success of the first nest. For white-tailed ptarmigan, juvenile survival had the highest elasticity followed by success of the first nest and survival of second-year females. Incorporating stochasticity into the demographic rates led to a 2 and 4% drop in λ for rock and white-tailed ptarmigan respectively. Using data from the first three years we also found that population growth rates of both species were depressed following an increased frequency of severe years, but less so for rock ptarmigan which showed greater resilience under these conditions. Conclusions Our results provide evidence that populations of closely related species can vary in their response to environmental change as a consequence of life history differences. Rock ptarmigan, with a slower life history, are more responsive to demographic rates that influence survival and older life stages but this response is tempered by the extent of variability in each of the rates. Thus, predictions need to consider both aspects in modeling population response to a varying climate. Juvenile survival was a highly influential rate for both species, but the period from independence to first breeding is a poorly understood stage for many bird species. Additional study on juvenile survival, the influence of density dependence and the effects of predators as the mechanism driving survival-reproduction tradeoffs are all areas requiring further study. Article in Journal/Newspaper rock ptarmigan BioMed Central
institution Open Polar
collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
topic Alpine
Climate change
Elasticity
Life history variation
Population growth
Ptarmigan
Reproductive effort
Survival
spellingShingle Alpine
Climate change
Elasticity
Life history variation
Population growth
Ptarmigan
Reproductive effort
Survival
Wilson, Scott
Martin, Kathy
Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds
topic_facet Alpine
Climate change
Elasticity
Life history variation
Population growth
Ptarmigan
Reproductive effort
Survival
description Abstract Background The life history strategy of a species can influence how populations of that species respond to environmental variation. In this study, we used a matrix modeling approach to examine how life history differences among sympatric rock and white-tailed ptarmigan affect the influence of demographic rates on population growth (λ) and the potential response to a changing climate. Rock ptarmigan have a slower life history strategy than white-tailed ptarmigan in the study region with lower annual reproductive effort but higher adult survival. Results Based on data from a 5-year field study, deterministic estimates of λ indicated that populations were stable for rock ptarmigan (λ = 1.01), but declining for white-tailed ptarmigan (λ = 0.96). The demographic rates with the highest elasticity for rock ptarmigan were the survival of after-second year females, followed by juvenile survival and success of the first nest. For white-tailed ptarmigan, juvenile survival had the highest elasticity followed by success of the first nest and survival of second-year females. Incorporating stochasticity into the demographic rates led to a 2 and 4% drop in λ for rock and white-tailed ptarmigan respectively. Using data from the first three years we also found that population growth rates of both species were depressed following an increased frequency of severe years, but less so for rock ptarmigan which showed greater resilience under these conditions. Conclusions Our results provide evidence that populations of closely related species can vary in their response to environmental change as a consequence of life history differences. Rock ptarmigan, with a slower life history, are more responsive to demographic rates that influence survival and older life stages but this response is tempered by the extent of variability in each of the rates. Thus, predictions need to consider both aspects in modeling population response to a varying climate. Juvenile survival was a highly influential rate for both species, but the period from independence to first breeding is a poorly understood stage for many bird species. Additional study on juvenile survival, the influence of density dependence and the effects of predators as the mechanism driving survival-reproduction tradeoffs are all areas requiring further study.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wilson, Scott
Martin, Kathy
author_facet Wilson, Scott
Martin, Kathy
author_sort Wilson, Scott
title Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds
title_short Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds
title_full Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds
title_fullStr Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds
title_full_unstemmed Influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds
title_sort influence of life history strategies on sensitivity, population growth and response to climate for sympatric alpine birds
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2012
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6785/12/9
genre rock ptarmigan
genre_facet rock ptarmigan
op_relation http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6785/12/9
op_rights Copyright 2012 Wilson and Martin; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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