Data from: Early-life variation in migration is subject to strong fluctuating survival selection in a partially migratory bird
Population dynamic and eco-evolutionary responses to environmental variation and change fundamentally depend on combinations of within- and among-cohort variation in phenotypic expression of key life-history traits, and on corresponding variation in selection on those traits. Specifically, in partia...
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Zusammenfassung: | Population dynamic and eco-evolutionary responses to environmental
variation and change fundamentally depend on combinations of within- and
among-cohort variation in phenotypic expression of key life-history
traits, and on corresponding variation in selection on those traits.
Specifically, in partially migratory populations, spatio-seasonal dynamics
depend on the degree of adaptive phenotypic expression of seasonal
migration versus residence, where more individuals migrate when selection
favours migration. Opportunity for adaptive (or, conversely, maladaptive)
expression could be particularly substantial in early life, through
initial development of migration versus residence. However, within- and
among-cohort dynamics of early-life migration, and of associated survival
selection, have not been quantified in any system, preventing any
inference on adaptive early-life expression. Such analyses have been
precluded because data on seasonal movements and survival of sufficient
young individuals, across multiple cohorts, have not been collected. We
undertook extensive year-round field resightings of 9,359 colour-ringed
juvenile European Shags (Gulosus aristotelis) from 11 successive cohorts
in a partially-migratory population. We fitted advanced Bayesian
multi-state capture-mark-recapture models to quantify early-life variation
in migration versus residence and associated survival across short
temporal occasions through each cohort’s first year from fledging, thereby
quantifying the degree of adaptive phenotypic expression of migration
within and across years. All cohorts were highly partially migratory, but
the degree and timing of migration varied considerably within and among
cohorts. Episodes of strong survival selection on migration versus
residence occurred both on short timeframes within years, and cumulatively
across whole years, generating instances of instantaneous and cumulative
net selection that would be obscured at coarser temporal resolutions.
Further, the magnitude and direction of selection varied among years,
generating strong fluctuating survival selection on early-life migration
across cohorts, as rarely evidenced in nature. Yet, the degree of
migration did not strongly covary with the direction of selection,
indicating limited early-life adaptive phenotypic expression. These
results reveal how dynamic early-life expression and selection on a key
life-history trait, seasonal migration, can emerge across seasonal,
annual, and multi-year timef |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.r4xgxd2mf |