Predicting population responses to environmental change is an on-going challenge in ecology. Studies investigating the links between fitness-related phenotypic traits and demography have shown that trait dynamic responses to environmental change can sometimes precede population dynamic responses, and thus, can be used as an early warning signal. However, it is still unknown under which ecological and evolutionary circumstances, shifts in fitness-related traits can precede population responses to environmental perturbation. Here, we take a trait-based demographic approach and investigate both trait and population dynamics in a density-regulated population in response to a gradual change in the environment. We explore the ecological and evolutionary constraints under which shifts in a fitness-related trait precedes a decline in population size. We show both analytically and with experimental data that under medium-to-slow rate of environmental change, shifts in trait value can precede population decline. We further show the positive influence of environmental predictability, average reproductive rate, plasticity, and genetic variation on shifts in trait dynamics preceding potential population declines. These results still hold under non-constant genetic variation and environmental stochasticity. Our study highlights ecological and evolutionary circumstances under which a fitness-related trait can be used as an early warning signal of an impending population decline.
When do shifts in trait dynamics precede population declines?
Gaurav Baruah,C. Clements,F. Guillaume,A. Ozgul
Published 2018 in bioRxiv
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
2018
- Venue
bioRxiv
- Publication date
2018-09-23
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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