| Literature DB >> 36095177 |
Hugo Cayuela1,2, Benjamin Monod-Broca3, Jean-François Lemaître1, Aurélien Besnard4, Jérôme M W Gippet2, Benedikt R Schmidt5,6, Antonio Romano7,8, Thomas Hertach9,10, Claudio Angelini11, Stefano Canessa12, Giacomo Rosa13, Leonardo Vignoli14, Alberto Venchi14, Marco Carafa15, Filippo Giachi16, Andrea Tiberi17, Alena M Hantzschmann18, Ulrich Sinsch18, Emilie Tournier19, Eric Bonnaire20, Günter Gollmann21, Birgit Gollmann22, Annemarieke Spitzen-van der Sluijs23,24, Holger Buschmann25, Thierry Kinet26, Arnaud Laudelout26, Remi Fonters27, Yoann Bunz28, Marc Corail28, Carlo Biancardi29, Anna R Di Cerbo30, Dominique Langlois31, Jean-Marc Thirion32, Laurent Bernard33, Elodie Boussiquault34, Florian Doré35, Titouan Leclerc36, Nadine Enderlin36, Florian Laurenceau37, Lucy Morin38, Mégane Skrzyniarz39, Mickael Barrioz39, Yohan Morizet40, Sam S Cruickshank5,41, Julian Pichenot42, Andreas Maletzky43, Thibaut Delsinne44, Dominik Henseler45, Damien Aumaître46, Miguel Gailledrat47, Julien Moquet48, Robert Veen49, Peter Krijnen50, Laurent Rivière51, Matteo Trenti8, Sonia Endrizzi8, Paolo Pedrini8, Marta Biaggini52, Stefano Vanni52, David Dudgeon53, Jean-Michel Gaillard1, Jean-Paul Léna3.
Abstract
Habitat anthropization is a major driver of global biodiversity decline. Although most species are negatively affected, some benefit from anthropogenic habitat modifications by showing intriguing life-history responses. For instance, increased recruitment through higher allocation to reproduction or improved performance during early-life stages could compensate for reduced adult survival, corresponding to "compensatory recruitment". To date, evidence of compensatory recruitment in response to habitat modification is restricted to plants, limiting understanding of its importance as a response to global change. We used the yellow-bellied toad (Bombina variegata), an amphibian occupying a broad range of natural and anthropogenic habitats, as a model species to test for and to quantify compensatory recruitment. Using an exceptional capture-recapture dataset composed of 21,714 individuals from 67 populations across Europe, we showed that adult survival was lower, lifespan was shorter, and actuarial senescence was higher in anthropogenic habitats, especially those affected by intense human activities. Increased recruitment in anthropogenic habitats fully offset reductions in adult survival, with the consequence that population growth rate in both habitat types was similar. Our findings indicate that compensatory recruitment allows toad populations to remain viable in human-dominated habitats and might facilitate the persistence of other animal populations in such environments.Entities:
Keywords: amphibians; global change; recruitment; senescence; survival
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36095177 PMCID: PMC9499503 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2206805119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779