Improving assessments of data-limited populations using life-history theory

Predicting how populations may respond to climate change and anthropogenic pressures requires detailed knowledge of demographic traits, such as survival and reproduction. However, the availability of these data varies greatly across space and taxa. Therefore, it is common practice to conduct populat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Applied Ecology
Main Authors: Horswill, Cat, Manica, Andrea, Daunt, Francis, Newell, Mark, Wanless, Sarah, Wood, Matthew, Matthiopoulos, Jason
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/235953/
https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/235953/1/235953.pdf
Description
Summary:Predicting how populations may respond to climate change and anthropogenic pressures requires detailed knowledge of demographic traits, such as survival and reproduction. However, the availability of these data varies greatly across space and taxa. Therefore, it is common practice to conduct population assessments by filling in missing values from surrogate species or other populations of the same species. However, using these independent surrogate values concurrently with observed data neglects the life‐history trade‐offs that connect the different aspects of a population's demography, thus introducing biases that could ultimately lead to erroneous management decisions. We use a Bayesian hierarchical approach to combine fragmented multi‐population data with established life‐history theory and reconstruct population‐specific demographic data across a substantial part of a species breeding range. We apply our analysis to a long‐lived colonial species, the black‐legged kittiwake Rissa tridactyla, that is classified as globally Vulnerable and is highly threatened by increasing anthropogenic pressures, such as offshore renewable energy development. We then use a projection analysis to examine how the reconstructed demographic parameters may improve population assessments, compared to models that combine observed data with independent surrogate values. Reconstructed demographic parameters can be utilised in a range of population modelling approaches. They can also be used as reference estimates to assess whether independent surrogate values are likely to over or underestimate missing demographic parameters. We show that surrogate values from independent sources are often used to fill in missing parameters that have large potential demographic impact, and that resulting biases can be driven in unpredictable directions thus precluding assessments from being consistently precautionary. Synthesis and applications: Our study dramatically increases the spatial coverage of population‐specific demographic data for ...