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The effects of productivity and seasonality on life history:: comparing age at maturity among moose (Alces alces) populations

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 303-312

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1466-822X.2002.00289.x

Keywords

Canada; competition; demography; density; energy; environmental gradients; environmental selection; pressures; environmental variability; juvenile mortality; life-history evolution

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The productivity hypothesis in respect of an animal species' geographical range predicts that whereas higher productivity at the equatorial periphery of a species' range favours superior competitors, lower productivity at the centre of a species' range favours high reproduction and reduced competitive traits. I test whether life-history patterns follow this hypothesis, using demographic data from 15 Canadian moose (Alces alces) populations. Two models are contrasted; the first assumes that intraspecific variation in age at maturity is explained proximately by density and juvenile mortality. Age at maturity was found to increase with decreasing juvenile mortality (P = 0.01) and increasing density (P = 0.006). To test the productivity hypothesis, the second model additionally included primary productivity and seasonality as geographical explanatory variables that would ultimately influence age at maturity via juvenile mortality and density. Path analysis indicated that including productivity and seasonality improved the model predictions of variation in age at maturity (R-a(2) 0.56 and 0.85). In bivariate comparisons, seasonality was negatively associated (P = 0.01) with age at maturity. In the best model, however, primary productivity was the environmental variable that explained 25% of the variance in age at maturity, and forest cover replaced seasonality as an explanatory variable. The positive association between primary productivity and age at maturity is consistent with the productivity hypothesis. Relative to populations that lived at the centre of the species' range (51degreesN), moose populations living in relatively high productivity and low seasonality environments (equatorial periphery of species' range; 48degreesN) experienced less juvenile mortality, more variable year-to-year density, higher relative density and slower life history (slower growth rate, later age at maturity, lower fecundity).

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