Demographic routes to variability and regulation in bird populations
Sæther, Bernt-Erik; Grøtan, Vidar; Engen, Steinar; Coulson, Tim; Grant, Peter R.; Visser, Marcel E.; Brommer, Jon E.; Grant, B. Rosemary; Gustafsson, Lars; Hatchwell, Ben J.; Jerstad, Kurt; Karell, Patrik; Pietiäinen, Hannu; Roulin, Alexandre; Røstad, Ole Wiggo; Weimerskirch, Henri
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Permanent lenke
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2404369Utgivelsesdato
2016Metadata
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- Institutt for biologi [2656]
- Institutt for matematiske fag [2589]
- Publikasjoner fra CRIStin - NTNU [39444]
Sammendrag
There is large interspecific variation in the magnitude of population fluctuations, even among
closely related species. The factors generating this variation are not well understood,
primarily because of the challenges of separating the relative impact of variation in population
size from fluctuations in the environment. Here, we show using demographic data from
13 bird populations that magnitudes of fluctuations in population size are mainly driven by
stochastic fluctuations in the environment. Regulation towards an equilibrium population size
occurs through density-dependent mortality. At small population sizes, population dynamics
are primarily driven by environment-driven variation in recruitment, whereas close to the
carrying capacity K, variation in population growth is more strongly influenced by densitydependent
mortality of both juveniles and adults. Our results provide evidence for the
hypothesis proposed by Lack that population fluctuations in birds arise from temporal
variation in the difference between density-independent recruitment and density-dependent
mortality during the non-breeding season.