4.8 Article

Life history tactics shape amphibians' demographic responses to the North Atlantic Oscillation

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 11, Pages 4620-4638

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13672

Keywords

amphibians; Bombina variegata; climate; fast-slow continuum; life history tactics; North Atlantic Oscillation; Salamandra salamandra; Triturus cristatus

Funding

  1. French Office National des Forets

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Over the last three decades, climate abnormalities have been reported to be involved in biodiversity decline by affecting population dynamics. A growing number of studies have shown that the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) influences the demographic parameters of a wide range of plant and animal taxa in different ways. Life history theory could help to understand these different demographic responses to the NAO. Indeed, theory states that the impact of weather variation on a species' demographic traits should depend on its position along the fast-slow continuum. In particular, it is expected that NAO would have a higher impact on recruitment than on adult survival in slow species, while the opposite pattern is expected occur in fast species. To test these predictions, we used long-term capture-recapture datasets (more than 15,000 individuals marked from 1965 to 2015) on different surveyed populations of three amphibian species in Western Europe: Triturus cristatus, Bombina variegata, and Salamandra salamandra. Despite substantial intraspecific variation, our study revealed that these three species differ in their position on a slow-fast gradient of pace of life. Our results also suggest that the differences in life history tactics influence amphibian responses to NAO fluctuations: Adult survival was most affected by the NAO in the species with the fastest pace of life (T.cristatus), whereas recruitment was most impacted in species with a slower pace of life (B.variegata and S.salamandra). In the context of climate change, our findings suggest that the capacity of organisms to deal with future changes in NAO values could be closely linked to their position on the fast-slow continuum.

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