Divergent demographic strategies of plants in variable environments
Divergent demographic strategies of plants in variable environments
One of the best-supported patterns in life history evolution is that organisms cope with environmental fluctuations by buffering their most important vital rates against them. This demographic buffering hypothesis is evidenced by a tendency for temporal variation in rates of survival and reproduction to correlate negatively with their contribution to fitness. Here, we show that widespread evidence for demographic buffering can be artefactual, resulting from natural relationships between the mean and variance of vital rates. Following statistical scaling, we find no significant tendency for plant life histories to be buffered demographically. Instead, some species are buffered, whereas others have labile life histories with higher temporal variation in their more important vital rates. We find phylogenetic signal in the strength and direction of variance–importance correlations, suggesting that clades of plants are prone to being either buffered or labile. Species with simple life histories are more likely to be demographically labile. Our results suggest important evolutionary nuances in how species deal with environmental fluctuations.
1-6
McDonald, Jenni L.
7063072e-fd0f-43d1-8b0b-177f50eec489
Franco, Miguel
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Townley, Stuart
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Ezard, Thomas H. G.
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Jelbert, Kim
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Hodgson, Dave J.
ededc83c-600d-4a04-b673-9809bea0147c
13 January 2017
McDonald, Jenni L.
7063072e-fd0f-43d1-8b0b-177f50eec489
Franco, Miguel
257e46da-4a52-4e0c-a73e-0f1573228c51
Townley, Stuart
cfabea1c-469b-4f32-bfb4-ecbbd2bad828
Ezard, Thomas H. G.
a143a893-07d0-4673-a2dd-cea2cd7e1374
Jelbert, Kim
2bc2871a-f3c0-4bfa-bb83-53ba242199c0
Hodgson, Dave J.
ededc83c-600d-4a04-b673-9809bea0147c
McDonald, Jenni L., Franco, Miguel, Townley, Stuart, Ezard, Thomas H. G., Jelbert, Kim and Hodgson, Dave J.
(2017)
Divergent demographic strategies of plants in variable environments.
Nature Ecology & Evolution, 1 (2), , [0029].
(doi:10.1038/s41559-016-0029).
Abstract
One of the best-supported patterns in life history evolution is that organisms cope with environmental fluctuations by buffering their most important vital rates against them. This demographic buffering hypothesis is evidenced by a tendency for temporal variation in rates of survival and reproduction to correlate negatively with their contribution to fitness. Here, we show that widespread evidence for demographic buffering can be artefactual, resulting from natural relationships between the mean and variance of vital rates. Following statistical scaling, we find no significant tendency for plant life histories to be buffered demographically. Instead, some species are buffered, whereas others have labile life histories with higher temporal variation in their more important vital rates. We find phylogenetic signal in the strength and direction of variance–importance correlations, suggesting that clades of plants are prone to being either buffered or labile. Species with simple life histories are more likely to be demographically labile. Our results suggest important evolutionary nuances in how species deal with environmental fluctuations.
Text
McDonald et al Nat. Ecol. Evol_pre-proof
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 10 November 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 January 2017
Published date: 13 January 2017
Organisations:
Ocean and Earth Science, Paleooceanography & Palaeoclimate
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Local EPrints ID: 407622
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/407622
PURE UUID: 26014e7a-3f6f-479a-a3e2-e0eaae4abb76
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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2017 17:05
Last modified: 22 Jun 2024 04:04
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Contributors
Author:
Jenni L. McDonald
Author:
Miguel Franco
Author:
Stuart Townley
Author:
Thomas H. G. Ezard
Author:
Kim Jelbert
Author:
Dave J. Hodgson
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