Heterogeneity of reproductive age increases the viability of semelparous populations
Authored by Alexandre Robert, Paul Acker, Romain Bourget, Bruno Colas
Date Published: 2014
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Abstract
1. One important feature of natural populations is that individuals of
the same age or functional class at a given time may vary in their
demographic rates, such as their survival probabilities or fecundities.
This demographic heterogeneity is due to the plastic response of
individuals to spatially variable environmental conditions, to genetic
variation or to maternal or cohort effects. Although demographic
heterogeneity may have serious consequences, it is generally not
included in models of population dynamics. The interactions of
demographic heterogeneity with environmental stochasticity and density
dependence are poorly understood, as are its consequences for population
viability.
2. We explored the effect of heterogeneity in age at reproduction on the
dynamics and viability of semelparous populations. We developed
individual-based models according to which individuals had to follow a
particular life path in a multifurcated life cycle. We used data from a
well-studied monocarpic plant, Centaurea corymbosa, to calibrate the
models with realistic distributions of demographic parameters.
3. Disregarding the trivial effect of changing generation time, we found
that heterogeneous populations had higher viability than homogeneous
populations due to the desynchronization of demographic processes among
individuals.
4. Heterogeneity buffers the negative impact of environmental
stochasticity by reducing the covariation of life histories among
individuals (i.e. the bet-hedging effect). In addition, when negative
density dependence is implemented, desynchronization in heterogeneous
populations reduces intraspecific competition. Indeed, crowded cohorts, occurring randomly due to demographic or environmental stochasticity, can spread their offspring over several years, which limits negative
interactions among individuals due to resource limitations (in this
study, a fixed number of microsites for seedlings). These effects are
likely to occur in every semelparous population.
5. Our results allow us to better understand the functional links
between the heterogeneity, desynchronization, dynamics and viability of
populations facing spatial and temporal variations in their
environments. These links suggest that demographic heterogeneity, regardless of its causes (genetic variation or plasticity), is an
important component of population dynamics. Neglecting demographic
heterogeneity leads to overestimating the level of synchronization among
individuals, which may in turn strongly bias viability assessments in
realistic environments.
Tags
Dynamics
Demographic stochasticity
Success
Extinction
Life-history
Centaurea-corymbosa asteraceae
Stage-structured populations
Scale
genetic-structure
Environmental stochasticity
Synchrony