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Life history mediates the trade?offs among different components of demographic resilience

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 20:31 authored by Pol Capdevila, Iain StottIain Stott, James Cant, Maria Beger, Gwilym Rowlands, Molly Grace, Roberto Salguero?Gómez, Amanda Bates
<p>Accelerating rates of biodiversity loss underscore the need to understand how species achieve resilience—the ability to resist and recover from a/biotic disturbances. Yet, the factors determining the resilience of species remain poorly understood, due to disagreements on its definition and the lack of large-scale analyses. Here, we investigate how the life history of 910 natural populations of animals and plants predicts their intrinsic ability to be resilient. We show that demographic resilience can be achieved through different combinations of compensation, resistance and recovery after a disturbance. We demonstrate that these resilience components are highly correlated with life history traits related to the species’ pace of life and reproductive strategy. Species with longer generation times require longer recovery times post-disturbance, whilst those with greater reproductive capacity have greater resistance and compensation. Our findings highlight the key role of life history traits to understand species resilience, improving our ability to predict how natural populations cope with disturbance regimes.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Ecology Letters

Volume

25

Issue

6

Pages/Article Number

1566-1579

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1461-023X

eISSN

1461-0248

Date Submitted

2022-08-31

Date Accepted

2022-03-08

Date of First Publication

2022-03-25

Date of Final Publication

2022-05-29

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-08-24

ePrints ID

50530