A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Reproductive effort and reproductive values in periodic environments




AuthorsBrommer J, Kokko H, Pietiainen H

PublisherUNIV CHICAGO PRESS

Publication year2000

Journal:American Naturalist

Journal name in sourceAMERICAN NATURALIST

Journal acronymAM NAT

Volume155

Issue4

First page 454

Last page472

Number of pages19

ISSN0003-0147

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/303335


Abstract
Life-history theory concerns the optimal spread of reproduction over an organism's life span. In variable environments, there may be extrinsic differences between breeding periods within an organism's life, affecting both offspring and parent and giving rise to intergenerational trade-offs. Such trade-offs are often discussed in terms of reproductive value for parent and offspring. Here, we consider parental life-history optimization in response to varying offspring values of a population regulated by territoriality, where the quality of the environment varies periodically. Periods are interpreted as either within-year (seasonality) or between-years variation (cyclicity). The evolutionarily stable strategy in a general model with two-phased periodicity in the environment ran generate either higher or lower effort in the more favorable of the two phases; hence knowing survival prospects of offspring does not suffice for predicting reproductive effort-the future of all descendants and the parent must be tracked. We also apply our method to data on the Ural owl Strix uralensis, a species preying on cyclically fluctuating voles. The observed dynamics are best predicted by assuming delayed reproductive costs and Type II functional response. Accounting for varying offspring values can lead to cases where both reproductive effort and recruitment of offspring are higher in the phase when voles are not maximally abundant, a pattern supported by our data.



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