Sensitivity of the population growth rate to demographic variability within and between phases of the disturbance cycle.
For species in disturbance-prone ecosystems, vital rates (survival, growth and reproduction) often vary both between and within phases of the cycle of disturbance and recovery; some of this variation is imposed by the environment, but some may represent adaptation of the life history to disturbance. Anthropogenic changes may amplify or impede these patterns of variation, and may have positive or negative effects on population growth. Using stochastic population projection matrix models, we develop stochastic elasticities (proportional derivatives of the long-run population growth rate) to gauge the population effects of three types of change in demographic variability (changes in within- and between-disturbance-phase variability and phase-specific changes). Computing these elasticities for five species of disturbance-influenced perennial plants, we pinpoint demographic rates that may reveal adaptation to disturbance, and we demonstrate that species may differ in their responses to different types of changes in demographic variability driven by climate change.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Stochastic Processes
- Population Growth
- Plants
- Models, Statistical
- Humans
- Ecosystem
- Ecology
- Ecology
- Climate
- Adaptation, Biological
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Stochastic Processes
- Population Growth
- Plants
- Models, Statistical
- Humans
- Ecosystem
- Ecology
- Ecology
- Climate
- Adaptation, Biological