A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Population responses to observed climate variability across multiple organismal groups
Authors: Le Coeur Christie, Storkey Jonathan, Ramula Satu
Publisher: WILEY
Publication year: 2021
Journal: Oikos
Journal name in source: OIKOS
Journal acronym: OIKOS
Volume: 130
Issue: 3
First page : 476
Last page: 487
Number of pages: 12
ISSN: 0030-1299
eISSN: 1600-0706
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.07371
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/Publication/53332956
Abstract
A major challenge in ecology is to understand how populations are affected by increased climate variability. Here, we assessed the effects of observed climate variability on different organismal groups (amphibians, insects, mammals, herbaceous plants and reptiles) by estimating the extent to which interannual variation in the annual population growth rates (CV lambda) and the absolute value of the long-term population growth rate (|log lambda|) were associated with short-term climate variability. We used empirical data (>= 20 consecutive years of annual abundances) from 59 wild populations in the Northern Hemisphere, and quantified variabilities in population growth rates and climatic conditions (temperature and precipitation in active and inactive seasons) calculated over four- and eight-year sliding time windows. We observed a positive relationship between the variability of growth rate (CV lambda) and the variability of temperature in the active season at the shorter timescale only. Moreover, |log lambda| was positively associated with the variability of precipitation in the inactive season at both timescales. Otherwise, the direction of the relationships between population dynamics and climate variability (if any) depended largely on the season and organismal group in question. Both CV lambda and |log lambda| correlated negatively with species' lifespan, indicating general differences in population dynamics between short-lived and long-lived species that were not related to climate variability. Our results suggest that although temporal variation in population growth rates and the magnitude of long-term population growth rates are partially associated with short-term interannual climate variability, demographic responses to climate fluctuations might still be population-specific rather than specific to given organismal groups, and driven by other factors than the observed climate variability.
A major challenge in ecology is to understand how populations are affected by increased climate variability. Here, we assessed the effects of observed climate variability on different organismal groups (amphibians, insects, mammals, herbaceous plants and reptiles) by estimating the extent to which interannual variation in the annual population growth rates (CV lambda) and the absolute value of the long-term population growth rate (|log lambda|) were associated with short-term climate variability. We used empirical data (>= 20 consecutive years of annual abundances) from 59 wild populations in the Northern Hemisphere, and quantified variabilities in population growth rates and climatic conditions (temperature and precipitation in active and inactive seasons) calculated over four- and eight-year sliding time windows. We observed a positive relationship between the variability of growth rate (CV lambda) and the variability of temperature in the active season at the shorter timescale only. Moreover, |log lambda| was positively associated with the variability of precipitation in the inactive season at both timescales. Otherwise, the direction of the relationships between population dynamics and climate variability (if any) depended largely on the season and organismal group in question. Both CV lambda and |log lambda| correlated negatively with species' lifespan, indicating general differences in population dynamics between short-lived and long-lived species that were not related to climate variability. Our results suggest that although temporal variation in population growth rates and the magnitude of long-term population growth rates are partially associated with short-term interannual climate variability, demographic responses to climate fluctuations might still be population-specific rather than specific to given organismal groups, and driven by other factors than the observed climate variability.
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