Universidade Federal do Tocantins-UFT, Palmas, Tocantins, Brazil.
Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade de Brasília-UnB, Brasília, Distrito Federal, Brazil.
J Anim Ecol. 2024 Nov;93(11):1656-1669. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14188. Epub 2024 Sep 22.
Understanding populations' responses to environmental change is crucial for mitigating human-induced disturbances. Here, we test hypotheses regarding how three essential components of demographic resilience (resistance, compensation and recovery) co-vary along the distinct life histories of three lizard species exposed to variable, prescribed fire regimes. Using a Bayesian hierarchical framework, we estimate vital rates (survival, growth and reproduction) with 14 years of monthly individual-level data and mark-recapture models to parameterize stochastic integral projection models from five sites in Brazilian savannas, each historically subjected to different fire regimes. With these models, we investigate how weather, microclimate and ecophysiological traits of each species influence their vital rates, emergent life history traits and demographic resilience components in varying fire regimes. Overall, weather and microclimate are better predictors of the species' vital rates, rather than their ecophysiological traits. Our findings reveal that severe fire regimes increase populations' resistance but decrease compensation or recovery abilities. Instead, populations have higher compensatory and recovery abilities at intermediate degrees of fire severity. Additionally, we identify generation time and reproductive output as predictors of resilience trends across fire regimes and climate. Our analyses demonstrate that the probability and quantity of monthly reproduction are the proximal drivers of demographic resilience across the three species. Our findings suggest that populations surpass a tipping point in severe fire regimes and achieve an alternative stable state to persist. Thus, higher heterogeneity in fire regimes can increase the reproductive aspects and resilience of different populations and avoid high-severity regimes that homogenize the environment. Despite being more resistant, species with long generation times and low reproductive output take longer to recover and cannot compensate as much as species with faster paces of life. We emphasize how reproductive constraints, such as viviparity and fixed clutch sizes, impact the ability of ectothermic populations to benefit and recover from disturbances, underscoring their relevance in conservation assessments.
了解种群对环境变化的响应对于减轻人为干扰至关重要。在这里,我们检验了关于三个关键的种群生存力组成部分(抵抗力、补偿和恢复力)如何随三个蜥蜴物种的不同生活史而变化的假设,这些蜥蜴物种暴露于不同的、规定的火灾模式下。我们使用贝叶斯层次框架,利用 14 年的每月个体水平数据和标记-重捕模型来估计生命表(存活率、增长率和繁殖率),以巴西热带稀树草原五个地点的随机积分预测模型为参数,每个地点都经历了不同的火灾模式。利用这些模型,我们研究了天气、微气候和每个物种的生态生理特征如何影响它们在不同火灾模式下的生命表、新兴的生活史特征和种群生存力组成部分。总的来说,天气和微气候是物种生命表的更好预测因素,而不是它们的生态生理特征。我们的研究结果表明,严重的火灾模式会增加种群的抵抗力,但会降低补偿或恢复能力。相反,在中等程度的火灾严重程度下,种群具有更高的补偿和恢复能力。此外,我们还发现世代时间和繁殖输出是跨越火灾模式和气候的种群生存力趋势的预测因素。我们的分析表明,在三个物种中,每月繁殖的概率和数量是种群生存力的近端驱动力。我们的研究结果表明,在严重的火灾模式下,种群会超过一个临界点,并达到一个替代的稳定状态以维持生存。因此,火灾模式的更高异质性可以增加不同种群的繁殖方面和生存力,并避免使环境同质化的高严重程度模式。尽管物种的抵抗力更强,但具有较长世代时间和低繁殖输出的物种需要更长的时间才能恢复,并且无法像生活节奏较快的物种那样进行补偿。我们强调了繁殖限制,如胎生和固定的卵窝大小,如何影响冷血种群从干扰中受益和恢复的能力,突显出它们在保护评估中的重要性。