4.6 Article

Patterns and drivers of intraspecific variation in avian life history along elevational gradients: a meta-analysis

Journal

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 91, Issue 2, Pages 469-482

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12180

Keywords

alpine; climate change; demography; fecundity; Hedge's d; interspecific competition; Lack's hypothesis; montane; productivity; species range limits

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada
  2. Environment Canada
  3. Killam Foundation postdoctoral fellowship
  4. University of British Columbia
  5. Kansas State University

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Elevational gradients provide powerful natural systems for testing hypotheses regarding the role of environmental variation in the evolution of life-history strategies. Case studies have revealed shifts towards slower life histories in organisms living at high elevations yet no synthetic analyses exist of elevational variation in life-history traits for major vertebrate clades. We examined (i) how life-history traits change with elevation in paired populations of bird species worldwide, and (ii) which biotic and abiotic factors drive elevational shifts in life history. Using three analytical methods, we found that fecundity declined at higher elevations due to smaller clutches and fewer reproductive attempts per year. By contrast, elevational differences in traits associated with parental investment or survival varied among studies. High-elevation populations had shorter and later breeding seasons, but longer developmental periods implying that temporal constraints contribute to reduced fecundity. Analyses of clutch size data, the trait for which we had the largest number of population comparisons, indicated no evidence that phylogenetic history constrained species-level plasticity in trait variation associated with elevational gradients. The magnitude of elevational shifts in life-history traits were largely unrelated to geographic (altitude, latitude), intrinsic (body mass, migratory status), or habitat covariates. Meta-population structure, methodological issues associated with estimating survival, or processes shaping range boundaries could potentially explain the nature of elevational shifts in life-history traits evident in this data set. We identify a new risk factor for montane populations in changing climates: low fecundity will result in lower reproductive potential to recover from perturbations, especially as fewer than half of the species experienced higher survival at higher elevations.

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