A fat chance of survival: Body condition provides life-history dependent buffering of environmental change in a wild mammal population

Julius G. Bright Ross , Chris Newman , Christina D. Buesching , Erin Connolly , Shinichi Nakagawa , David W. Macdonald
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Environmental change often causes decreased food availability and/or increased foraging costs, putting wild animals at risk of starvation. Body-fat reserves can enable individuals to resist (buffer) periods of weather-driven food scarcity, improving their chances of survival and subsequent reproductive success. This capacity, however, is constrained by life-history factors and fixed long-term differences between individuals. Here, we use 29 years of data from a population of wild European badgers (Meles meles) to test how weather and population density affect individual body condition indices (BCIs), how BCI mediates survival rate and reproductive success, and whether long-term BCI phenotypes (fat vs. thin) provide life-history advantages. Maintaining body condition above a certain threshold was key to survival (reflecting a nonlinear relationship), especially when temperatures varied more between seasons (requiring greater tactical foraging and BCI adjustments) and following excessive rainfall (causing thermoregulative stress). BCI also affected survival more strongly in older individuals. Female reproductive success increased linearly with autumn BCI, and consistently fatter badgers (of both sexes) had higher lifetime reproductive success; however, substantial intra-individual body-condition variation remained after accounting for weather and individual factors, and 84% of individuals varied BCI substantially from year to year. Modelling BCI responses according to projected climate change through 2080 (Emissions Scenario RCP 8.5) revealed that even strong warming (as one-off events) would produce < 5% survival probability reductions, pushing few individuals below the BCI risk threshold. We thus demonstrate that life-history factors and individual body-condition tactics are fundamental to understanding population resilience under anthropogenic climate change.

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生存的机会很小:在野生哺乳动物种群中,身体状况提供了依赖生活史的环境变化缓冲
环境变化往往导致食物供应减少和/或觅食成本增加,使野生动物面临饥饿的危险。身体脂肪储备可以使个体抵御(缓冲)天气导致的食物短缺时期,提高它们的生存机会和随后的繁殖成功。然而,这种能力受到生活史因素和个体之间固定的长期差异的限制。在这里,我们使用来自野生欧洲獾(Meles Meles)种群的29年数据来测试天气和种群密度如何影响个体身体状况指数(BCI), BCI如何调节存活率和繁殖成功率,以及长期BCI表型(肥胖与瘦)是否提供生活史优势。将身体状况维持在一定阈值以上是生存的关键(反映了非线性关系),特别是当季节之间的温度变化更大(需要更大的战术觅食和BCI调整)和降雨过多(导致体温调节压力)时。脑机接口对老年人的生存影响也更大。雌性獾的繁殖成功率随秋季BCI的增加呈线性增加,且持续肥胖的獾(两性)终生繁殖成功率较高;然而,考虑到天气和个体因素后,个体内部的身体状况变化仍然很大,84%的个体BCI每年都有很大的变化。根据预测到2080年的气候变化(排放情景RCP 8.5)对BCI响应进行建模显示,即使是强烈的变暖(作为一次性事件)也会产生<5%的生存概率降低,很少有人低于脑机接口风险阈值。因此,我们证明生活史因素和个体身体状况策略是理解人为气候变化下种群恢复力的基础。
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