Data from: Extreme site fidelity as an optimal strategy in an unpredictable and homogeneous environment
1. Animal site fidelity structures space-use, population demography, and ultimately gene flow. Understanding the adaptive selection for site fidelity patterns provides a mechanistic understanding to both spatial and population processes. This can be achieved by linking space-use with environmental v...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Animal site fidelity structures space-use, population demography, and
ultimately gene flow. Understanding the adaptive selection for site
fidelity patterns provides a mechanistic understanding to both spatial and
population processes. This can be achieved by linking space-use with
environmental variability (spatial and temporal) and demographic
parameters. However, rarely is the environmental context that drives the
selection for site fidelity behavior fully considered. 2. We use
ecological theory to understand whether the spatial and temporal
variability in breeding site quality can explain the site fidelity
behavior and demographic patterns of Gunnison sage-grouse (Centrocercus
minimus). We examined female site fidelity patterns across multiple
spatial scales: proximity of consecutive year nest locations, space-use
overlap within and across the breeding and brooding season, and fidelity
to a breeding patch. We also examined the spatial and temporal variability
in nest, chick, juvenile, and adult survival. 3. We found Gunnison
sage-grouse to be site faithful to their breeding patch, area of use
within the patch, and generally to where they nest, suggesting an `Always
Stay' site fidelity strategy. This is an optimal evolutionary
strategy when site quality is unpredictable. Further, we found limited
spatial variability in survival within age groups, suggesting little
demographic benefit to moving among patches. We suggest Gunnison
sage-grouse site fidelity is driven by the unpredictability of predation
in a relatively homogeneous environment, the lack of benefits and likely
costs to moving across landscape patches and leaving known lek and
breeding/brooding areas. 4. Space use and demography are commonly studied
separately. More so, site fidelity patterns are rarely framed in the
context of ecological theory, beyond questions related to the
win-stay:lose-switch rule. To move beyond describing patterns and
understand the adaptive selection driving species movements and their
demographic consequences requires integrating movement, demography, and
environmental variability in a synthetic framework. 5. Site fidelity
theory provides a coherent framework to simultaneously investigate the
spatial and population ecology of animal populations. Using it to frame
ecological questions will lead to a more mechanistic understanding of
animal movement, spatial population structuring, and meta-population
dynamics. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7c834db |