Data from: Food availability and predation risk, rather than intrinsic attributes are the main factors shaping the reproductive decisions of a long-lived predator
Deciphering the causes of variation in reproductive success is a fundamental issue in ecology, as the number of offspring produced is an important driver of individual fitness and population dynamics. Little is known however, about how different factors interact to drive variation in reproduction, s...
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Zusammenfassung: | Deciphering the causes of variation in reproductive success is a
fundamental issue in ecology, as the number of offspring produced is an
important driver of individual fitness and population dynamics. Little is
known however, about how different factors interact to drive variation in
reproduction, such as whether an individual's response to extrinsic
conditions (e.g. food availability or predation) varies according to its
intrinsic attributes (e.g. age, previous allocation of resources towards
reproduction). We used 29 years of reproductive data from marked female
tawny owls and natural variation in food availability (field vole) and
predator abundance (northern goshawk) to quantify the extent to which
extrinsic and intrinsic factors interact to influence owl reproductive
traits (breeding propensity, clutch size and nest abandonment). Extrinsic
and intrinsic factors appeared to interact to affect breeding propensity
(which accounted for 83% of the variation in owl reproductive success).
Breeding propensity increased with vole density, although increasing
goshawk abundance reduced the strength of this relationship. Owls became
slightly more likely to breed as they aged, although this was only
apparent for individuals who had fledged chicks the year before. Owls laid
larger clutches when food was more abundant. When owls were breeding in
territories less exposed to goshawk predation, 99.5% of all breeding
attempts reached the fledging stage. In contrast, the probability of
breeding attempts reaching the fledging stage in territories more exposed
to goshawk predation depended on the amount of resources an owl had
already allocated towards reproduction (averaging 87.7% for owls with
clutches of 1-2 eggs compared to 97.5% for owls with clutches of 4-6
eggs). Overall, our results suggested that changes in extrinsic conditions
(predominantly food availability, but also predator abundance) had the
greatest influence on owl reproduction. In response to deteriorating
extrinsic conditions (fewer voles and more goshawks) owls appeared to
breed more frequently, but allocated fewer resources per breeding attempt.
However, intrinsic attributes also appeared to have a relatively small
influence on how an individual responded to variation in extrinsic
conditions, which indicates that reproductive decisions were shaped by a
complex series of extrinsic and intrinsic trade-offs. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.6n579 |