Data from: Climatic conditions cause complex patterns of covariation between demographic traits in a long-lived raptor
1. Environmental variation can induce life-history changes that can last over a large part of the lifetime of an organism. If multiple demographic traits are affected, expected changes in climate may influence environmental covariances among traits in a complex manner. Thus, examining the consequenc...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Environmental variation can induce life-history changes that can last
over a large part of the lifetime of an organism. If multiple demographic
traits are affected, expected changes in climate may influence
environmental covariances among traits in a complex manner. Thus,
examining the consequences of environmental fluctuations requires that
individual information at multiple life stages is available, which is
particularly challenging in long-lived species. 2. Here, we analyse how
variation in climatic conditions occurring in the year of hatching of
female goshawks Accipiter gentilis (L.) affects age-specific variation in
demographic traits and lifetime reproductive success (LRS). LRS decreased
with increasing temperature in April in the year of hatching, due to lower
breeding frequency and shorter reproductive life span. In contrast, the
probability for a female to successfully breed was higher in years with a
warm April, but lower LRS of the offspring in these years generated a
negative covariance among fecundity rates among generations. 3. The
mechanism by which climatic conditions generated cohort effects was likely
through influencing the quality of the breeding segment of the population
in a given year, as the proportion of pigeons in the diet during the
breeding period was positively related to annual and LRS, and the diet of
adult females that hatched in warm years contained fewer pigeons. 4.
Climatic conditions experienced during different stages of individual life
histories caused complex patterns of environmental covariance among
demographic traits even across generations. Such environmental covariances
may either buffer or amplify impacts of climate change on population
growth, emphasizing the importance of considering demographic changes
during the complete life history of individuals when predicting the effect
of climatic change on population dynamics of long-lived species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.rg817 |