Weithman Chelsea, Gibson Daniel, Hunt Kelsi, Friedrich Meryl, Fraser James, Karpanty Sarah, Catlin Daniel
Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Nov 15;7(24):11044-11056. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3533. eCollection 2017 Dec.
Breeding propensity, the probability that an animal will attempt to breed each year, is perhaps the least understood demographic process influencing annual fecundity. Breeding propensity is ecologically complex, as associations among a variety of intrinsic and extrinsic factors may interact to affect an animal's breeding decisions. Individuals that opt not to breed can be more difficult to detect than breeders, which can (1) lead to difficulty in estimation of breeding propensity, and (2) bias other demographic parameters. We studied the effects of sex, age, and population reproductive success on the survival and breeding propensity of a migratory shorebird, the piping plover (), nesting on the Missouri River. We used a robust design Barker model to estimate true survival and breeding propensity and found survival decreased as birds aged and did so more quickly for males than females. Monthly survival during the breeding season was lower than during migration or the nonbreeding season. Males were less likely to skip breeding (range: 1-17%) than females (range: 3-26%; β = -0.21, 95% CI: -0.38 to -0.21), and both sexes were less likely to return to the breeding grounds following a year of high reproductive success. Birds that returned in a year following relatively high population-wide reproductive output were in poorer condition than following a year with lower reproductive output. Younger adult birds and females were more likely to migrate from the breeding area earlier than older birds and males; however, all birds stayed on the breeding grounds longer when nest survival was low, presumably because of renesting attempts. Piping plovers used a variety of environmental and demographic cues to inform their reproduction, employing strategies that could maximize fitness on average. Our results support the "disposable soma" theory of aging and follow with predictions from life history theory, exhibiting the intimate connections among the core ecological concepts of senescence, carryover effects, and life history.
繁殖倾向,即动物每年尝试繁殖的概率,可能是影响年繁殖力的最不为人所理解的种群统计学过程。繁殖倾向在生态方面很复杂,因为多种内在和外在因素之间的关联可能相互作用,从而影响动物的繁殖决策。选择不繁殖的个体可能比繁殖个体更难被发现,这可能(1)导致繁殖倾向估计困难,以及(2)使其他种群统计学参数产生偏差。我们研究了性别、年龄和种群繁殖成功率对在密苏里河筑巢的迁徙滨鸟笛鸻的生存和繁殖倾向的影响。我们使用稳健设计的巴克模型来估计真实的生存率和繁殖倾向,发现随着鸟类年龄增长,生存率下降,且雄性比雌性下降得更快。繁殖季节的月生存率低于迁徙或非繁殖季节。雄性比雌性跳过繁殖的可能性更小(范围:1% - 17%)(雌性范围:3% - 26%;β = -0.21,95%置信区间:-0.38至-0.21),并且在高繁殖成功率的一年后,两性返回繁殖地的可能性都降低。在全种群繁殖产出相对较高的一年后返回的鸟类,其身体状况比繁殖产出较低的一年后返回的鸟类更差。较年轻的成年鸟类和雌性比年长的鸟类和雄性更早从繁殖区域迁徙;然而,当巢穴存活率较低时,所有鸟类在繁殖地停留的时间更长,可能是因为有再次筑巢的尝试。笛鸻利用各种环境和种群统计学线索来指导它们的繁殖,采用的策略平均而言可以使适应性最大化。我们的结果支持衰老的“可抛弃体细胞”理论,并符合生活史理论的预测,展示了衰老、遗留效应和生活史等核心生态概念之间的紧密联系。