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Why we cannot always expect life history strategies to directly inform on sensitivity to environmental change
Rademaker, M.; van Leeuwen, A.; Smallegange, I.M. (2024). Why we cannot always expect life history strategies to directly inform on sensitivity to environmental change. J. Anim. Ecol. 93(3): 348-366. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.14050
In: Journal of Animal Ecology. Blackwell Science/British Ecological Society: Oxford. ISSN 0021-8790; e-ISSN 1365-2656, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Author keywords
    dynamic energy budget; fast-slow continuum; functional traits; integral projection model; reproductive strategies

Authors  Top 
  • Rademaker, M., more
  • van Leeuwen, A., more
  • Smallegange, I.M.

Abstract
    1. Variation in life history traits in animals and plants can often be structured along major axes of life history strategies. The position of a species along these axes can inform on their sensitivity to environmental change. For example, species with slow life histories are found to be less sensitive in their long-term population responses to environmental change than species with fast life histories.
    2. This provides a tantalizing link between sets of traits and population responses to change, contained in a highly generalizable theoretical framework.
    3. Life history strategies are assumed to reflect the outcome of life history tradeoffs that, by their very nature, act at the individual level. Examples include the tradeoff between current and future reproductive success, and allocating energy into growth versus reproduction. But the importance of such tradeoffs in structuring population-level responses to environmental change remains understudied.
    4. We aim to increase our understanding of the link between individual-level life history tradeoffs and the structuring of life history strategies across species, as well as the underlying links to population responses to environmental change.
    5. We find that the classical association between lifehistory strategies and population responses to environmental change breaks down when accounting for individual-level tradeoffs and energy allocation.
    6. Therefore, projecting population responses to environmental change should not be inferred based only on a limited set of species traits.
    7. We summarize our perspective and a way forward in a conceptual framework.

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