Litcius/Paper detail

Social consequences of rapid environmental change

Daniel T. Blumstein, Loren D. Hayes, Noa Pinter‐Wollman

2022Trends in Ecology & Evolution52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While direct influences of the environment on population growth and resilience are well studied, indirect routes linking environmental changes to population consequences are less explored. We suggest that social behavior is key for understanding how anthropogenic environmental changes affect the resilience of animal populations. Social structures of animal groups are evolved and emergent phenotypes that often have demographic consequences for group members. Importantly, environmental drivers may directly influence the consequences of social structure or indirectly influence them through modifications to social interactions, group composition, or group size. We have developed a framework to study these demographic consequences. Estimating the strength of direct and indirect pathways will give us tools to understand, and potentially manage, the effect of human-induced rapid environmental changes.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental changePsychological resilienceAffect (linguistics)PopulationResilience (materials science)Social environmentEcologyBiologyPsychologySocial psychologyClimate changeSociologyDemographySocial sciencePhysicsCommunicationThermodynamicsWildlife Ecology and ConservationPrimate Behavior and EcologyAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies