Phenological mismatch strongly affects individual fitness but not population demography in a woodland passerine
Phenological mismatch strongly affects individual fitness but not population demography in a woodland passerine
Date
2012-02-20
Authors
Reed, Thomas E.
Jenouvrier, Stephanie
Visser, Marcel E.
Jenouvrier, Stephanie
Visser, Marcel E.
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Keywords
Timing
Mismatch
Synchrony
Climate
Demographic
Vital rates
Fitness
Selection gradient.
Mismatch
Synchrony
Climate
Demographic
Vital rates
Fitness
Selection gradient.
Abstract
Populations are shifting their phenology in response to climate change, but these
shifts are often asynchronous among interacting species. Resulting phenological
mismatches can drive simultaneous changes in natural selection and population
demography, but the links between these interacting processes are poorly
understood.
Here we analyse 37 years of data from an individual-based study of great tits
(Parus major) in the Netherlands and use mixed-effects models to separate the
within- and across-year effects of phenological mismatch between great tits and
caterpillars (a key food source for developing nestlings) on components of fitness
at the individual and population levels..
Several components of individual fitness were affected by individual mismatch
(i.e. late breeding relative to the caterpillar food peak date), including the
probability of double-brooding, fledgling success, offspring recruitment
probability, and the number of recruits. Together these effects contributed to an
overall negative relationship between relative fitness and laying dates, i.e. selection
for earlier laying on average.
Directional selection for earlier laying was stronger in years where birds bred on
average later than the food peak, but was weak or absent in years where the
phenology of birds and caterpillars matched (i.e. no population mismatch).
The mean number of fledglings per female was lower in years when population
mismatch was high, in part because fewer second broods were produced.
Population mismatch had a weak effect on the mean number of recruits per female,
and no effect on mean adult survival, after controlling for the effects of breeding
density and the quality of the autumnal beech (Fagus sylvatica) crop.
These findings illustrate how climate-change-44 induced mismatch can have strong
effects on the relative fitness of phenotypes within years, but weak effects on mean
demographic rates across years. We discuss various general mechanisms that
influence the extent of coupling between breeding phenology, selection and
population dynamics in open populations subject to strong density regulation and
stochasticity.
Description
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2012. The definitive version was published in Journal of Animal Ecology 82 (2013): 131-144, doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2012.02020.x.