Morandini Virginia, Dugger Katie M, Schmidt Annie E, Varsani Arvind, Lescroël Amélie, Ballard Grant, Lyver Phil O'B, Barton Kerry, Ainley David G
Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA.
Migres Foundation CIMA Tarifa Spain.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Feb 20;14(2):e10859. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10859. eCollection 2024 Feb.
Sex-related differences in vital rates that drive population change reflect the basic life history of a species. However, for visually monomorphic bird species, determining the effect of sex on demographics can be a challenge. In this study, we investigated the effect of sex on apparent survival, recruitment, and breeding propensity in the Adélie penguin (), a monochromatic, slightly size dimorphic species with known age, known sex, and known breeding history data collected during 1996-2019 ( = 2127 birds) from three breeding colonies on Ross Island, Antarctica. Using a multistate capture-mark-recapture maximum-likelihood model, we estimated apparent survival (), recapture (resighting) probability (), and the probability of transitioning among breeding states and moving between colonies (; colony-specific non-juvenile pre-breeders, breeders, and non-breeders). Survival rate varied by breeding status and colony, but not sex, and pre-breeders had higher survival rates than breeders and non-breeders. Females had a higher probability of recruiting into the breeding population each year and may enter the breeding pool at younger ages. In contrast, both sexes had the same probability of breeding from year to year once they had recruited. Although we detected no direct sex effects on survival, the variation in recruitment probability and age-at-first reproduction, along with lower survival rates of breeders compared to pre-breeders, likely leads to shorter lifespans for females. This is supported by our findings of a male-biased mean adult sex ratio (ASR) of 1.4 males for every female ( proportion of males = 0.57, SD = 0.07) across all colonies and years in this metapopulation. Our study illustrates how important it can be to disentangle sex-related variation in population vital rates, particularly for species with complex life histories and demographic dynamics.
驱动种群变化的生命率方面的性别差异反映了一个物种的基本生活史。然而,对于视觉上单态的鸟类物种而言,确定性别对种群统计学的影响可能是一项挑战。在本研究中,我们调查了性别对阿德利企鹅()的表观存活率、补充率和繁殖倾向的影响。阿德利企鹅是一种单色、体型略有二态性的物种,我们收集了1996年至2019年期间(= 2127只鸟)来自南极罗斯岛三个繁殖群体的已知年龄、已知性别和已知繁殖历史数据。使用多状态捕获-标记-重捕最大似然模型,我们估计了表观存活率()、重捕(重新观察)概率()以及在繁殖状态之间转换和在群体之间移动的概率(;特定群体的非幼年繁殖前个体、繁殖个体和非繁殖个体)。存活率因繁殖状态和群体而异,但不因性别而异,繁殖前个体的存活率高于繁殖个体和非繁殖个体。雌性每年进入繁殖种群的概率更高,并且可能在更年轻的时候进入繁殖群体。相比之下,两性一旦进入繁殖群体,每年繁殖的概率相同。虽然我们没有检测到性别对存活率的直接影响,但补充概率和首次繁殖年龄的差异,以及繁殖个体与繁殖前个体相比更低的存活率,可能导致雌性寿命更短。在这个集合种群的所有群体和年份中,我们发现成年性别比(ASR)呈雄性偏倚,每只雌性对应1.4只雄性(雄性比例 = 0.57,标准差 = 0.07),这支持了上述结论。我们的研究说明了厘清种群生命率中与性别相关的变异是多么重要,特别是对于具有复杂生活史和种群统计学动态的物种。