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Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules?

Density dependence, population regulation, and variability in population size are fundamental population processes, the manifestation and interrelationships of which are affected by environmental variability. However, there are surprisingly few empirical studies that distinguish the effect of enviro...

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Autores principales: Pöysä, Hannu, Rintala, Jukka, Johnson, Douglas H., Kauppinen, Jukka, Lammi, Esa, Nudds, Thomas D., Väänänen, Veli‐Matti
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5513220/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28725377
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2413
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author Pöysä, Hannu
Rintala, Jukka
Johnson, Douglas H.
Kauppinen, Jukka
Lammi, Esa
Nudds, Thomas D.
Väänänen, Veli‐Matti
author_facet Pöysä, Hannu
Rintala, Jukka
Johnson, Douglas H.
Kauppinen, Jukka
Lammi, Esa
Nudds, Thomas D.
Väänänen, Veli‐Matti
author_sort Pöysä, Hannu
collection PubMed
description Density dependence, population regulation, and variability in population size are fundamental population processes, the manifestation and interrelationships of which are affected by environmental variability. However, there are surprisingly few empirical studies that distinguish the effect of environmental variability from the effects of population processes. We took advantage of a unique system, in which populations of the same duck species or close ecological counterparts live in highly variable (north American prairies) and in stable (north European lakes) environments, to distinguish the relative contributions of environmental variability (measured as between‐year fluctuations in wetland numbers) and intraspecific interactions (density dependence) in driving population dynamics. We tested whether populations living in stable environments (in northern Europe) were more strongly governed by density dependence than populations living in variable environments (in North America). We also addressed whether relative population dynamical responses to environmental variability versus density corresponded to differences in life history strategies between dabbling (relatively “fast species” and governed by environmental variability) and diving (relatively “slow species” and governed by density) ducks. As expected, the variance component of population fluctuations caused by changes in breeding environments was greater in North America than in Europe. Contrary to expectations, however, populations in more stable environments were not less variable nor clearly more strongly density dependent than populations in highly variable environments. Also, contrary to expectations, populations of diving ducks were neither more stable nor stronger density dependent than populations of dabbling ducks, and the effect of environmental variability on population dynamics was greater in diving than in dabbling ducks. In general, irrespective of continent and species life history, environmental variability contributed more to variation in species abundances than did density. Our findings underscore the need for more studies on populations of the same species in different environments to verify the generality of current explanations about population dynamics and its association with species life history.
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spelling pubmed-55132202017-07-19 Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules? Pöysä, Hannu Rintala, Jukka Johnson, Douglas H. Kauppinen, Jukka Lammi, Esa Nudds, Thomas D. Väänänen, Veli‐Matti Ecol Evol Original Research Density dependence, population regulation, and variability in population size are fundamental population processes, the manifestation and interrelationships of which are affected by environmental variability. However, there are surprisingly few empirical studies that distinguish the effect of environmental variability from the effects of population processes. We took advantage of a unique system, in which populations of the same duck species or close ecological counterparts live in highly variable (north American prairies) and in stable (north European lakes) environments, to distinguish the relative contributions of environmental variability (measured as between‐year fluctuations in wetland numbers) and intraspecific interactions (density dependence) in driving population dynamics. We tested whether populations living in stable environments (in northern Europe) were more strongly governed by density dependence than populations living in variable environments (in North America). We also addressed whether relative population dynamical responses to environmental variability versus density corresponded to differences in life history strategies between dabbling (relatively “fast species” and governed by environmental variability) and diving (relatively “slow species” and governed by density) ducks. As expected, the variance component of population fluctuations caused by changes in breeding environments was greater in North America than in Europe. Contrary to expectations, however, populations in more stable environments were not less variable nor clearly more strongly density dependent than populations in highly variable environments. Also, contrary to expectations, populations of diving ducks were neither more stable nor stronger density dependent than populations of dabbling ducks, and the effect of environmental variability on population dynamics was greater in diving than in dabbling ducks. In general, irrespective of continent and species life history, environmental variability contributed more to variation in species abundances than did density. Our findings underscore the need for more studies on populations of the same species in different environments to verify the generality of current explanations about population dynamics and its association with species life history. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016-09-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5513220/ /pubmed/28725377 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2413 Text en © 2016 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Pöysä, Hannu
Rintala, Jukka
Johnson, Douglas H.
Kauppinen, Jukka
Lammi, Esa
Nudds, Thomas D.
Väänänen, Veli‐Matti
Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules?
title Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules?
title_full Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules?
title_fullStr Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules?
title_full_unstemmed Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules?
title_short Environmental variability and population dynamics: do European and North American ducks play by the same rules?
title_sort environmental variability and population dynamics: do european and north american ducks play by the same rules?
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5513220/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28725377
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2413
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