Rainfall is associated with divorce in the socially monogamous Seychelles warbler.

IF 3.5 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Journal of Animal Ecology Pub Date : 2024-11-11 DOI:10.1111/1365-2656.14216
A A Bentlage, F J D Speelman, J Komdeur, T Burke, D S Richardson, H L Dugdale
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Abstract

Divorce-terminating a pair bond whilst both members are alive-is a mating strategy observed in many socially monogamous species often linked to poor reproductive success. As environmental factors directly affect individual condition and reproductive performance, they can indirectly influence divorce. Given current climate change, understanding how environmental fluctuations affect partnership stability has important implications, including for conservation. Yet, the relationship between the environment and divorce remains largely unstudied. We examined the influence of temporal environmental variability on the prevalence of within- and between-season divorce and the possible underlying mechanisms in a socially monogamous passerine. Analysing 16 years of data from a longitudinal dataset, we investigated the relationship between rainfall and divorce in the Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis). First, we performed climate window analyses to identify the temporal windows of rainfall that best predict reproductive success and divorce. Then, we tested the effects of these temporal windows of rainfall on reproductive success and divorce and the influence of reproductive success on divorce whilst controlling for covariates. Annual divorce rates varied from 1% to 16%. The probability of divorce was significantly associated with the quadratic effect of 7 months of total rainfall before and during the breeding season, with divorce increasing in years with low and high rainfall. This quadratic relationship was driven by a heavy rainfall event in 1997, as excluding 1997 from our analyses left a significant negative linear relationship between rainfall and divorce. Although the same temporal window of rainfall predicting divorce significantly influenced reproductive success, we found no significant correlation between reproductive success and divorce. Our findings suggest that rainfall impacts divorce. Given that this effect is likely not directly mediated by reproductive success, we discuss other possible drivers. Although the 1997 super El Niño event shows how heavy rainfall may affect socially monogamous partnerships, more data are required to estimate the robustness of this effect. By adding to the growing body of literature showing that environmental conditions influence the stability of socially monogamous partnerships, we provide novel insights that may also be important for conservation efforts in times of climate change.

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降雨量与社会一夫一妻制塞舌尔莺的离婚有关。
离婚--在两个成员都活着的情况下终止配对关系--是在许多社会一夫一妻制物种中观察到的一种交配策略,通常与繁殖成功率低有关。由于环境因素会直接影响个体状况和繁殖表现,因此也会间接影响离婚。鉴于当前的气候变化,了解环境波动如何影响伴侣关系的稳定性具有重要意义,包括对物种保护。然而,环境与离婚之间的关系在很大程度上仍未得到研究。我们研究了时间环境变化对一夫一妻制被鸟类季节内和季节间离婚率的影响以及可能的内在机制。通过分析 16 年的纵向数据集,我们研究了降雨量与塞舌尔莺(Acrocephalus sechellensis)离婚之间的关系。首先,我们进行了气候窗口分析,以确定最能预测繁殖成功率和离婚率的降雨时间窗口。然后,我们检验了这些降雨时间窗对繁殖成功率和离婚率的影响,以及在控制协变量的情况下,繁殖成功率对离婚率的影响。年离婚率从 1% 到 16% 不等。离婚概率与繁殖季节前和繁殖季节期间 7 个月总降雨量的二次方效应有明显关系,离婚率在降雨量低和降雨量高的年份都会增加。这种二次关系是由 1997 年的一次强降雨事件引起的,因为在我们的分析中排除了 1997 年,降雨量与离婚之间仍存在明显的负线性关系。虽然预测离婚的降雨时间窗口对生育成功率有显著影响,但我们发现生育成功率与离婚之间没有显著相关性。我们的研究结果表明,降雨对离婚有影响。鉴于这种影响很可能不是由生殖成功率直接介导的,我们讨论了其他可能的驱动因素。尽管 1997 年的超强厄尔尼诺现象表明了强降雨可能会影响一夫一妻制的社会伴侣关系,但要估计这种影响的稳健性,还需要更多的数据。越来越多的文献表明,环境条件会影响社会一夫一妻制伙伴关系的稳定性,通过对这些文献的补充,我们提供了新的见解,这些见解可能对气候变化时期的保护工作也很重要。
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来源期刊
Journal of Animal Ecology
Journal of Animal Ecology 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
4.20%
发文量
188
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Animal Ecology publishes the best original research on all aspects of animal ecology, ranging from the molecular to the ecosystem level. These may be field, laboratory and theoretical studies utilising terrestrial, freshwater or marine systems.
期刊最新文献
A 'how-to' guide for estimating animal diel activity using hierarchical models. Reproductive success and offspring survival decline for female elephant seals past prime age. Bee fear responses are mediated by dopamine and influence cognition. Long-term multi-species demographic studies reveal divergent negative impacts of winter storms on seabird survival. Reconstruction of long-term sublethal effects of warming on a temperate coral in a climate change hotspot.
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