Small scale, elevation- and environmental-related differences in life history strategies in a temperate resident songbird.

IF 2.9 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Royal Society Open Science Pub Date : 2025-04-02 eCollection Date: 2025-04-01 DOI:10.1098/rsos.241777
Benjamin R Sonnenberg, Carrie L Branch, Angela M Pitera, Virginia K Heinen, Lauren E Whitenack, Joseph F Welklin, Vladimir V Pravosudov
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Environmental drivers of within-population reproductive patterns are often hypothesized to lead to reproductive strategies tuned to local conditions. Organisms adjust energy allocation between survival and reproduction based on experience, age, lifespan and resource availability. Variation in these energetic investments can be described as different demographic tactics which are expected to optimize the fitness of local populations. These ideas are largely supported by both empirical and model-based studies but research identifying specific strategies and their corresponding environmental drivers within wild populations remains rare. Using 12 years of data, we investigated reproductive investment strategies in a relatively short-lived resident songbird, the mountain chickadee (Poecile gambeli), at two elevations that differ in environmental harshness in the North American Sierra Nevada mountains. Challenging winter environments at high elevations impose strong selection pressure on survival-related traits (e.g. specialized spatial cognition associated with food caching) and significantly shorten the length of the reproductive window. Here, we show that chickadees at a higher elevation lay smaller clutches (ca 0.41 fewer eggs) and produce fewer (ca 0.25 fewer nestlings) but larger offspring (ca 0.4 g heavier) compared to lower elevation residents. Due to the harsher and less predictable environmental conditions at higher elevations, this investment strategy in this resident species likely leads to the production of offspring with greater chances of survival. Overall, our results show that within-species differences in life history strategies may evolve over a small spatial scale along strong environmental gradients.

种群内繁殖模式的环境驱动因素通常被假定为导致适应当地条件的繁殖策略。生物会根据经验、年龄、寿命和资源可用性来调整生存和繁殖之间的能量分配。这些能量投资的变化可被描述为不同的人口策略,这些策略有望优化当地种群的适应性。这些观点在很大程度上得到了基于经验和模型的研究的支持,但确定野生种群中特定策略及其相应环境驱动因素的研究仍然很少。我们利用 12 年的数据,研究了一种寿命相对较短的留鸟--山地雏鸟(Poecile gambeli)在北美内华达山脉环境恶劣程度不同的两个海拔地区的繁殖投资策略。高海拔地区严酷的冬季环境对与生存相关的特征(如与食物贮藏相关的专门空间认知)施加了强大的选择压力,并大大缩短了繁殖窗口期。在这里,我们发现与低海拔地区的雏鸟相比,高海拔地区的雏鸟产卵量更少(约少产0.41枚卵),雏鸟数量更少(约少产0.25只雏鸟),但后代体型更大(约重0.4克)。由于高海拔地区的环境条件更为恶劣,可预测性更低,因此该留鸟物种的这种投资策略可能会使其生产的后代有更大的存活机会。总之,我们的研究结果表明,生活史策略的种内差异可能会在较小的空间范围内沿着强烈的环境梯度演化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Royal Society Open Science
Royal Society Open Science Multidisciplinary-Multidisciplinary
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
508
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Royal Society Open Science is a new open journal publishing high-quality original research across the entire range of science on the basis of objective peer-review. The journal covers the entire range of science and mathematics and will allow the Society to publish all the high-quality work it receives without the usual restrictions on scope, length or impact.
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