Data from: Low demographic variability in wild primate populations: fitness impacts of variation, covariation, and serial correlation in vital rates
In a stochastic environment, long-term fitness can be influenced by variation, covariation, and serial correlation in vital rates (survival and fertility). Yet no study of an animal population has parsed the contributions of these three aspects of variability to long-term fitness. We do so using a u...
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Zusammenfassung: | In a stochastic environment, long-term fitness can be influenced by
variation, covariation, and serial correlation in vital rates (survival
and fertility). Yet no study of an animal population has parsed the
contributions of these three aspects of variability to long-term fitness.
We do so using a unique database that includes complete life history
information for wild-living individuals of seven primate species that have
been the subjects of long-term (22 to 45 year) behavioral studies.
Overall, the estimated levels of vital rate variation had only minor
effects on long-term fitness, and the effects of vital rate covariation
and serial correlation were even weaker. To explore why, we compared
estimated variances of adult survival in primates to values for other
vertebrates in the literature, and found that adult survival is
significantly less variable in primates than in the other vertebrates.
Finally, we tested the prediction that adult survival, because it more
strongly influences fitness in a constant environment, will be less
variable than newborn survival, and found only mixed support for the
prediction. Our results suggest that wild primates may be buffered against
detrimental fitness effects of environmental stochasticity by their highly
developed cognitive abilities, social networks, and broad, flexible diets. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1985 |