| Literature DB >> 32216007 |
Marco Andrello1, Pierre de Villemereuil2, Marta Carboni3, Delphine Busson4, Marie-Josée Fortin5, Oscar E Gaggiotti6, Irène Till-Bottraud7.
Abstract
Demographic compensation arises when vital rates change in opposite directions across populations, buffering the variation in population growth rates, and is a mechanism often invoked to explain the stability of species geographic ranges. However, studies on demographic compensation have disregarded the effects of temporal variation in vital rates and their temporal correlations, despite theoretical evidence that stochastic dynamics can affect population persistence in temporally varying environments. We carried out a seven-year-long demographic study on the perennial plant Arabis alpina (L.) across six populations encompassing most of its elevational range. We discovered demographic compensation in the form of negative correlations between the means of plant vital rates, but also between their temporal coefficients of variation, correlations and elasticities. Even if their contribution to demographic compensation was small, this highlights a previously overlooked, but potentially important, role of stochastic processes in stabilising population dynamics at range margins.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Arabis alpinazzm321990; Brassicaceae; elasticity; elevation; population dynamics; stochasticity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32216007 DOI: 10.1111/ele.13488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492