Data from: Density‐dependent and phenological mismatch effects on growth and survival in lesser snow and Ross's goslings ...

Strong seasonality of high‐latitude environments imposes temporal constraints on forage availability and quality for keystone herbivores in terrestrial arctic ecosystems, including hyper‐abundant colonial geese. Changes in food quality due to intraspecific competition, or food availability relative...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ross, Megan V., Alisauskas, Ray T., Douglas, David C., Kellett, Dana K., Drake, Kiel L.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.51bf1j3
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.51bf1j3
Description
Summary:Strong seasonality of high‐latitude environments imposes temporal constraints on forage availability and quality for keystone herbivores in terrestrial arctic ecosystems, including hyper‐abundant colonial geese. Changes in food quality due to intraspecific competition, or food availability relative to the breeding phenology of birds, may have consequences for growth and survival of young. We used long‐term data (1993‐2014) from the Karrak Lake nesting colony in the Canadian central arctic to study relative roles of density and phenological mismatch (i.e. days between seasonal peaks in vegetation quality and hatching) as drivers of annual variations in gosling survival among lesser snow (Anser caerulescens caerulescens) and Ross's geese (A. rossii). Survival of Ross's goslings was consistently higher compared to snow geese. For both species, annual gosling survival was greatest when phenological mismatch was minimal and when nesting population size was low. We also examined gosling structural size (1999‐2014) ... : Ross et al. Gosling Survival and Size DataExcel file with 4 sheets: Gosling size data, gosling size metadata, gosling survival data and gosling survival metadataRoss et al. JAB_Data.xlsx ...