The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate

- The internal predictive adaptive response (internal PAR) hypothesis predicts that individuals born in poor conditions should start to reproduce earlier if they are likely to have reduced performance in later life. However, whether this is the case remains unexplored in wild populations. Here,we us...

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Published in:Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Main Authors: Douhard, Mathieu, Loe, Leif Egil, Stien, Audun, Bonenfant, Christophe, Irvine, R. Justin, Veiberg, Vebjørn, Ropstad, Erik, Albon, Steve D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2454039
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1760
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spelling ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/2454039 2024-09-15T18:02:29+00:00 The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate Douhard, Mathieu Loe, Leif Egil Stien, Audun Bonenfant, Christophe Irvine, R. Justin Veiberg, Vebjørn Ropstad, Erik Albon, Steve D. 2016-11-07T10:49:32Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2454039 https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1760 eng eng Andre: UK Natural Environment Research Council Andre: Macaulay Development Trust Norges forskningsråd: 216051 Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Biological Sciences 2016, 283 urn:issn:1471-2954 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2454039 https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1760 cristin:1396615 Journal article Peer reviewed 2016 ftunivmob https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1760 2024-07-19T03:05:57Z - The internal predictive adaptive response (internal PAR) hypothesis predicts that individuals born in poor conditions should start to reproduce earlier if they are likely to have reduced performance in later life. However, whether this is the case remains unexplored in wild populations. Here,we use longitudinal data from a long-term study of Svalbard reindeer to examine age-related changes in adult female life-history responses to environmental conditions experienced in utero as indexed by rain-on-snow (ROSutero). We show that females experiencing high ROSutero had reduced reproductive success only from 7 years of age, independent of early reproduction. These individuals were able to maintain the same annual reproductive success between 2 and 6 years as phenotypically superior conspecifics that experienced low ROSutero. Young females born after high ROSutero engage in reproductive events at lower body mass (about 2.5 kg less) than those born after low ROSutero. The mean fitness of females that experienced poor environmental conditions in early lifewas comparable with that of females exposed to good environmental conditions in early life. These results are consistent with the idea of internal PAR and suggest that the life-history responses to early-life conditions can buffer the delayed effects of weather on population dynamics. climate change, cohort, development, predictive adaptive response, phenotypic plasticity, Svalbard reindeer Article in Journal/Newspaper Climate change Svalbard svalbard reindeer Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 283 1841 20161760
institution Open Polar
collection Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
op_collection_id ftunivmob
language English
description - The internal predictive adaptive response (internal PAR) hypothesis predicts that individuals born in poor conditions should start to reproduce earlier if they are likely to have reduced performance in later life. However, whether this is the case remains unexplored in wild populations. Here,we use longitudinal data from a long-term study of Svalbard reindeer to examine age-related changes in adult female life-history responses to environmental conditions experienced in utero as indexed by rain-on-snow (ROSutero). We show that females experiencing high ROSutero had reduced reproductive success only from 7 years of age, independent of early reproduction. These individuals were able to maintain the same annual reproductive success between 2 and 6 years as phenotypically superior conspecifics that experienced low ROSutero. Young females born after high ROSutero engage in reproductive events at lower body mass (about 2.5 kg less) than those born after low ROSutero. The mean fitness of females that experienced poor environmental conditions in early lifewas comparable with that of females exposed to good environmental conditions in early life. These results are consistent with the idea of internal PAR and suggest that the life-history responses to early-life conditions can buffer the delayed effects of weather on population dynamics. climate change, cohort, development, predictive adaptive response, phenotypic plasticity, Svalbard reindeer
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Douhard, Mathieu
Loe, Leif Egil
Stien, Audun
Bonenfant, Christophe
Irvine, R. Justin
Veiberg, Vebjørn
Ropstad, Erik
Albon, Steve D.
spellingShingle Douhard, Mathieu
Loe, Leif Egil
Stien, Audun
Bonenfant, Christophe
Irvine, R. Justin
Veiberg, Vebjørn
Ropstad, Erik
Albon, Steve D.
The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate
author_facet Douhard, Mathieu
Loe, Leif Egil
Stien, Audun
Bonenfant, Christophe
Irvine, R. Justin
Veiberg, Vebjørn
Ropstad, Erik
Albon, Steve D.
author_sort Douhard, Mathieu
title The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate
title_short The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate
title_full The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate
title_fullStr The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate
title_full_unstemmed The influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild Arctic ungulate
title_sort influence of weather conditions during gestation on life histories in a wild arctic ungulate
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2454039
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1760
genre Climate change
Svalbard
svalbard reindeer
genre_facet Climate change
Svalbard
svalbard reindeer
op_relation Andre: UK Natural Environment Research Council
Andre: Macaulay Development Trust
Norges forskningsråd: 216051
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Biological Sciences 2016, 283
urn:issn:1471-2954
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2454039
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1760
cristin:1396615
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1760
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
container_volume 283
container_issue 1841
container_start_page 20161760
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