Environmental change reduces body condition, but not population growth, in a high-arctic herbivore
Environmental change influences fitness-related traits and demographic rates, which in herbivores are often linked to resource-driven variation in body condition. Coupled body condition-demographic responses may therefore be important for herbivore population dynamics in fluctuating environments, su...
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Zusammenfassung: | Environmental change influences fitness-related traits and demographic
rates, which in herbivores are often linked to resource-driven variation
in body condition. Coupled body condition-demographic responses may
therefore be important for herbivore population dynamics in fluctuating
environments, such as the Arctic. We applied a transient Life-Table
Response Experiment (‘transient-LTRE’) to demographic data from Svalbard
barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis), to quantify their population-dynamic
responses to changes in body mass. We partitioned contributions from
direct and delayed demographic and body condition-mediated processes to
variation in population growth. Declines in body condition (1980-2017),
which positively affected reproduction and fledgling survival, had
negligible consequences for population growth. Instead, population growth
rates were largely reproduction-driven, in part through positive responses
to rapidly advancing spring phenology. The virtual lack of body
condition-mediated effects indicates that herbivore population dynamics
may be more resilient to changing body condition than previously expected,
with implications for their persistence under environmental change. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.9p8cz8wdv |