The implications of environmental variability on caribou demography: theoretical considerations

Random environmental influences, such as snow cover, are widely regarded as an integral feature of caribou population dynamics. We conducted computer simulations to explore the ramifications of such stochastic variability for caribou demography. We devised 4 models with increasing levels of complexi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Rangifer
Main Authors: James A. Schaefer, Francois Messier
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7557/2.11.4.994
https://doaj.org/article/6b83bc5bdcb5412cabbb7721cf15b69b
Description
Summary:Random environmental influences, such as snow cover, are widely regarded as an integral feature of caribou population dynamics. We conducted computer simulations to explore the ramifications of such stochastic variability for caribou demography. We devised 4 models with increasing levels of complexity: Model 1, density-independence under different levels of stochasticity and r; Model 2, non-linear effect of snow cover on r; Model 3, non-linear effect of snow cover on r and stochasticity as a function of population size; and Model 4, non-linear effect of snow cover on r, stochasticity as a funciton of population size, and density-dependence according to the logistic equation. The results of Model 1 indicated that nearly all caribou populations subject only to environmental vagaries experienced either extincition or irruption. Model 2 revealed that non-linear effect of snow cover depressed the realised r as a function of population size. Finally, Model 4 suggested long-term population as previously reported in literature, but with reduced chance of overshooting K under moderate to high environmental variability.