| Literature DB >> 25821954 |
Vasco M N C S Vieira1, Luz Valeria Oppliger2, Aschwin H Engelen3, Juan A Correa2.
Abstract
POINT 1: Management of crops, commercialized or protected species, plagues or life-cycle evolution are subjects requiring comparisons among different demographic strategies. The simpler methods fail in relating changes in vital rates with changes in population viability whereas more complex methods lack accuracy by neglecting interactions among vital rates. POINT 2: The difference between the fitness (evaluated by the population growth rate λ) of two alternative demographies is decomposed into the contributions of the differences between the pair-wised vital rates and their interactions. This is achieved through a full Taylor expansion (i.e. remainder = 0) of the demographic model. The significance of each term is determined by permutation tests under the null hypothesis that all demographies come from the same pool. POINT 3: An example is given with periodic demographic matrices of the microscopic haploid phase of two kelp cryptic species observed to partition their niche occupation along the Chilean coast. The method provided clear and synthetic results showing conditional differentiation of reproduction is an important driver for their differences in fitness along the latitudinal temperature gradient. But it also demonstrated that interactions among vital rates cannot be neglected as they compose a significant part of the differences between demographies. POINT 4: This method allows researchers to access the effects of multiple effective changes in a life-cycle from only two experiments. Evolutionists can determine with confidence the effective causes for changes in fitness whereas population managers can determine best strategies from simpler experimental designs.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25821954 PMCID: PMC4379098 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Decomposition of the change in the population growth rate (λ) from the Va population (Pa) to the Iq population (Pb) both incubated at 10°C.
Each square is the Δλ term (λ-λ) relative to the respective periodic matrix parameter. Therefore, positive represents advantage to Pb whereas negative represents advantage for Pa. The significant terms are in bigger squares.
Fig 2Contrast in the microstage dynamics described by (a) the two largest factors: vital rates belonging to factor 1, all with positive loadings (green); factor 2, with positive loadings (blue) and with negative loadings (red); and (b) factors 3 and 4: (solid line) factor 3, (dotted line) factor 4, (blue) positive loadings and (red) negative loadings.
Fig 3Preference of each population to follow the blue, green or red path (as defined in Fig. 2) depending on the incubation temperature.