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Improved estimation of intrinsic growth r max for long‐lived species: integrating matrix models and allometry
Author(s) -
Dillingham Peter W.,
Moore Jeffrey E.,
Fletcher David,
Cortés Enric,
Curtis K. Alexandra,
James Kelsey C.,
Lewison Rebecca L.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
ecological applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.864
H-Index - 213
eISSN - 1939-5582
pISSN - 1051-0761
DOI - 10.1890/14-1990
Subject(s) - allometry , population , biology , ecology , estimator , statistics , population ecology , vital rates , life history theory , population growth , life history , mathematics , demography , sociology
Intrinsic population growth rate ( r max ) is an important parameter for many ecological applications, such as population risk assessment and harvest management. However, r max can be a difficult parameter to estimate, particularly for long‐lived species, for which appropriate life table data or abundance time series are typically not obtainable. We describe a method for improving estimates of r max for long‐lived species by integrating life‐history theory (allometric models) and population‐specific demographic data (life table models). Broad allometric relationships, such as those between life history traits and body size, have long been recognized by ecologists. These relationships are useful for deriving theoretical expectations for r max , but r max for real populations may vary from simple allometric estimators for “archetypical” species of a given taxa or body mass. Meanwhile, life table approaches can provide population‐specific estimates of r max from empirical data, but these may have poor precision from imprecise and missing vital rate parameter estimates. Our method borrows strength from both approaches to provide estimates that are consistent with both life‐history theory and population‐specific empirical data, and are likely to be more robust than estimates provided by either method alone. Our method uses an allometric constant: the product of r max and the associated generation time for a stable‐age population growing at this rate. We conducted a meta‐analysis to estimate the mean and variance of this allometric constant across well‐studied populations from three vertebrate taxa (birds, mammals, and elasmobranchs) and found that the mean was approximately 1.0 for each taxon. We used these as informative Bayesian priors that determine how much to “shrink” imprecise vital rate estimates for a data‐limited population toward the allometric expectation. The approach ultimately provides estimates of r max (and other vital rates) that reflect a balance of information from the individual studied population, theoretical expectation, and meta‐analysis of other populations. We applied the method specifically to an archetypical petrel (representing the genus Procellaria ) and to white sharks ( Carcharodon carcharias ) in the context of estimating sustainable fishery bycatch limits.

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