Can individual variation in phenotypic plasticity enhance population viability?
Authored by Adriana A Maldonado-Chaparro, Dwight W Read, Daniel T Blumstein
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2017.02.023
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://ars-els-cdn-com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/content/image/1-s2.0-S0304380016308043-mmc1.txt
Abstract
In response to climatic and other sources of environmental variation,
individuals within a population may adjust their behavioral,
morphological or physiological responses to varying environmental
conditions through phenotypic plasticity. In seasonal environments, time
constraints related to seasonality, as well as variation in climatic
factors, may affect body mass growth rates. To cope with the
consequences of a harsh period, individuals may, for example, compensate
for lost body mass by accelerating their growth rate in the following
period. Phenotypically plastic responses like this can, therefore,
directly affect body mass, which may affect individual fitness and,
ultimately, population dynamics. Here, we use a well-studied population
of yellow-bellied marmots, Marmotaflaviventris, in Colorado to
parametrize and develop an individual-based model (IBM) to investigate
how phenotypically plastic responses in body mass growth rate may
compensate for an individual's bad start after a harsh period
(compensatory growth), and to explore whether individual variation in
compensatory growth favors population persistence under less favorable
climatic scenarios. A simulation model that allowed marmots with a body
mass less than the population's average body mass to compensate their
growth provided the best match with observed population sizes,
suggesting the importance of trade-offs in population dynamics. We also
found that compensatory growth plays an important role in decreasing the
probability of extinction under both less favorable colder and random
climate scenarios. Our results lead to a deeper understanding of the
mechanisms that govern population fluctuations and highlight the
importance of quantifying the fitness cost of phenotypically plastic
responses. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Agent-based models
Performance
Dynamics
Population persistence
Climate-change
Consequences
Life-history
Individual-based
model
Body-mass
Juvenile atlantic salmon
Individual variation
Body mass growth-rate plasticity
Yellow-bellied marmots
Compensatory growth