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Age-specific survival and annual variation in survival of female chamois differ between populations
Author(s) -
Josefa Bleu,
Ivar Herfindal,
Anne Loison,
Anne M. G. Kwak,
Mathieu Garel,
Carole Toïgo,
Thomas Rempfler,
Flurin Filli,
BerntErik Sæther
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
oecologia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.328
H-Index - 195
eISSN - 1432-1939
pISSN - 0029-8549
DOI - 10.1007/s00442-015-3420-5
Subject(s) - biology , senescence , demography , population , mark and recapture , ecology , longevity , variation (astronomy) , survival rate , zoology , genetics , medicine , astrophysics , sociology , physics
In many species, population dynamics are shaped by age-structured demographic parameters, such as survival, which can cause age-specific sensitivity to environmental conditions. Accordingly, we can expect populations with different age-specific survival to be differently affected by environmental variation. However, this hypothesis is rarely tested at the intra-specific level. Using capture-mark-recapture models, we quantified age-specific survival and the extent of annual variations in survival of females of alpine chamois in two sites. In one population, survival was very high (>0.94; Bauges, France) until the onset of senescence at approximately 7 years old, whereas the two other populations (Swiss National Park, SNP) had a later onset (12 years old) and a lower rate of senescence. Senescence patterns are therefore not fixed within species. Annual variation in survival was higher in the Bauges (SD = 0.26) compared to the SNP populations (SD = 0.20). Also, in each population, the age classes with the lowest survival also experienced the largest temporal variation, in accordance with inter-specific comparisons showing a greater impact of environmental variation on these age classes. The large difference between the populations in age-specific survival and variation suggests that environmental variation and climate change will affect these populations differently.

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