Litcius/Paper detail

Shifts in the relative fitness contributions of fecundity and survival in variable and changing environments

Lauren B. Buckley, Sean D. Schoville, Caroline M. Williams

2021Journal of Experimental Biology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Organisms respond to shifts in climate means and variability via distinct mechanisms. Accounting for these differential responses and appropriately aggregating them is central to understanding and predicting responses to climate variability and change. Separately considering fitness components can clarify organismal responses: fecundity is primarily an integrated, additive response to chronic environmental conditions over time via mechanisms such as energy use and acquisition, whereas survival can be strongly influenced by short-term, extreme environmental conditions. In many systems, the relative importance of fecundity and survival constraints changes systematically along climate gradients, with fecundity constraints dominating at high latitudes or altitudes (i.e. leading range edges as climate warms), and survival constraints dominating at trailing range edges. Incorporating these systematic differences in models may improve predictions of responses to recent climate change over models that assume similar processes along environmental gradients. We explore how detecting and predicting shifts in fitness constraints can improve our ability to forecast responses to climate gradients and change.

Topics & Concepts

FecundityClimate changeRange (aeronautics)LatitudeEcologyEnvironmental scienceSurvival of the fittestBiologyGeographyDemographyEvolutionary biologyPopulationEngineeringAerospace engineeringSociologyGeodesyPhysiological and biochemical adaptationsSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeAnimal Behavior and Reproduction