Rui Ueda, Minoru Kanaiwa, Akira Terui, Gaku Takimoto, Takuya Sato
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Seasonal timing of ecosystem linkage mediates life-history variation in a salmonid fish population
Life-history variation can contribute to the long-term persistence of populations; however, it remains unclear which environmental factors drive life-history variation within a population. Seasonally recurring resource subsidies are common in nature and may influence variations in recipient consumers' life-history traits. In this study, we experimentally demonstrated that terrestrial invertebrate subsidies occurring early in the growing season facilitated consumer individuals to adopt fast growth. In contrast, fewer consumer individuals adopted fast growth when subsidies occurred late in the growing season. Consumer individuals that adopted fast growth matured early at age 1, suggesting that the observed variation in life history emerged along with a fast–slow life-history continuum. The estimated survival probability was lower in consumer individuals from the faster growth cluster in the no-supply treatment (control), suggesting a growth–survival trade-off. However, the growth–survival trade-off became unclear in the early-supply treatment and even reversed in the late-supply treatment. As a result, the frequency of consumer individuals maturing at age 1 was higher in the early-supply treatment than in the late-supply treatment and no-supply treatment, implying a higher short-term population growth with the early subsidies. Our findings highlight that seasonal ecosystem linkages through resource subsidies help us understand how life-history variation can be maintained within a population at the landscape scale.
期刊介绍:
Ecology publishes articles that report on the basic elements of ecological research. Emphasis is placed on concise, clear articles documenting important ecological phenomena. The journal publishes a broad array of research that includes a rapidly expanding envelope of subject matter, techniques, approaches, and concepts: paleoecology through present-day phenomena; evolutionary, population, physiological, community, and ecosystem ecology, as well as biogeochemistry; inclusive of descriptive, comparative, experimental, mathematical, statistical, and interdisciplinary approaches.