Blomberg Erik J, Sedinger James S, Gibson Daniel, Coates Peter S, Casazza Michael L
Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Conservation Biology, University of Maine 5755 Nutting Hall, Room 210, Orono, Maine, 04469.
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, University of Nevada Reno. Mail Stop 186, Reno, Nevada, 89557.
Ecol Evol. 2014 Dec;4(23):4488-99. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1139. Epub 2014 Nov 12.
Prebreeding survival is an important life history component that affects both parental fitness and population persistence. In birds, prebreeding can be separated into pre- and postfledging periods; carryover effects from the prefledging period may influence postfledging survival. We investigated effects of body condition at fledging, and climatic variation, on postfledging survival of radio-marked greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) in the Great Basin Desert of the western United States. We hypothesized that body condition would influence postfledging survival as a carryover effect from the prefledging period, and we predicted that climatic variation may mediate this carryover effect or, alternatively, would act directly on survival during the postfledging period. Individual body condition had a strong positive effect on postfledging survival of juvenile females, suggesting carryover effects from the prefledging period. Females in the upper 25th percentile of body condition scores had a postfledging survival probability more than twice that (Φ = 0.51 ± 0.06 SE) of females in the bottom 25th percentile (Φ = 0.21 ± 0.05 SE). A similar effect could not be detected for males. We also found evidence for temperature and precipitation effects on monthly survival rates of both sexes. After controlling for site-level variation, postfledging survival was nearly twice as great following the coolest and wettest growing season (Φ = 0.77 ± 0.05 SE) compared with the hottest and driest growing season (Φ = 0.39 ± 0.05 SE). We found no relationships between individual body condition and temperature or precipitation, suggesting that carryover effects operated independently of background climatic variation. The temperature and precipitation effects we observed likely produced a direct effect on mortality risk during the postfledging period. Conservation actions that focus on improving prefledging habitat for sage-grouse may have indirect benefits to survival during postfledging, due to carryover effects between the two life phases.
繁殖前的存活是一个重要的生活史组成部分,它既影响亲代适合度,也影响种群的持续性。在鸟类中,繁殖前可分为离巢前和离巢后阶段;离巢前阶段的遗留效应可能会影响离巢后的存活。我们在美国西部大盆地沙漠对无线电标记的艾草松鸡(Centrocercus urophasianus)进行了研究,调查离巢时的身体状况和气候变化对其离巢后存活的影响。我们假设身体状况会作为离巢前阶段的遗留效应影响离巢后的存活,并且预测气候变化可能会调节这种遗留效应,或者直接影响离巢后阶段的存活。个体身体状况对幼年雌鸟离巢后的存活有很强的正向影响,这表明存在离巢前阶段的遗留效应。身体状况得分处于前25%的雌鸟离巢后存活概率是处于后25%的雌鸟(Φ = 0.21 ± 0.05 SE)的两倍多(Φ = 0.51 ± 0.06 SE)。对于雄鸟,未检测到类似效应。我们还发现了温度和降水对两性月度存活率有影响的证据。在控制了地点水平的变化后,与最热和最干燥的生长季节(Φ = 0.39 ± 0.05 SE)相比,在最凉爽和最湿润的生长季节之后,离巢后的存活几乎是其两倍(Φ = 0.77 ± 0.05 SE)。我们未发现个体身体状况与温度或降水之间存在关联,这表明遗留效应独立于背景气候变化而发挥作用。我们观察到的温度和降水效应可能对离巢后阶段的死亡风险产生了直接影响。由于这两个生活阶段之间的遗留效应,专注于改善艾草松鸡离巢前栖息地的保护行动可能对离巢后的存活有间接益处。