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Climate-induced variation in vital rates of an unharvested large-herbivore population

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CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
卷 81, 期 1, 页码 33-45

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CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/Z02-218

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Variation in vital rates of an unharvested elk (Cervus elaphus) population was studied using telemetry for 7 consecutive years, 1991-1998. We found pronounced senescence in survival rates, but no evidence for reproductive senescence. Prime-age females (<10 years old) experienced very high annual survival rates (mean = 0.97, SE = 0.02), with lower survival rates for senescent animals (>= 10 years old; mean = 0.79, SE = 0.06). There was evidence that the severity of snowpack conditions had little effect on survival of prime-age animals except during the most extreme winter, while survival of senescent animals was progressively depressed as the severity of snowpack conditions increased. Reproductive rates remained essentially constant, near their biological maxima (mean = 0.91, SE = 0.02). Annual recruitment was highly variable. Snowpack had a pronounced effect on recruitment (r(2) = 0.91), the most severe snowpack conditions resulting in the virtual elimination of a juvenile cohort. Population estimates and recruitment rates obtained during this investigation and historic data collected from 1965 to 1980 support the premise that the population has been maintained in a dynamic equilibrium for at least three decades despite the stochastic effects of climate variation on vital rates. We conclude that the population is resource-limited, with variation about the equilibrium caused primarily by variable recruitment driven by stochastic annual snowpack.

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