1 / 21

Life history strategies in a North American red squirrels population

Life history strategies in a North American red squirrels population. Sébastien Descamps PhD candidate Under the supervision of Dominique Berteaux and Jean-Michel Gaillard. Life history strategies?.

Download Presentation

Life history strategies in a North American red squirrels population

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Life history strategies in a North American red squirrels population Sébastien Descamps PhD candidate Under the supervision of Dominique Berteaux and Jean-Michel Gaillard

  2. Life history strategies? « Life histories are the probabilities of survival and the rates of reproduction at each age in the life span » Partridge & Harvey 1988 Demographic tactics Co-adaptation of demographic parameters Response to evolution

  3. The red squirrel at Kluane • > 15 years of data • > 1200 males and 1200 females of known age • Reproduction (litter size, mass, growth rate…) • Low dispersion • Food availability index

  4. 1- Senescence Survival Age Reproduction Questions:

  5. Survival Age Reproduction Questions: • 2- Cost(s) of reproduction trade-off

  6. Questions: • 3- Cohort effects Survival Year of birth Year of birth trade-off Age Reproduction

  7. Questions: • 4- Demographic modelisation Survival Population dynamic Year of birth trade-off Age Reproduction

  8. Lots of results with mice in the lab Senescence Small mammals: • Very few results in natural conditions, and with small mammals other than mice or voles

  9. Senescence Red squirrel at Kluane > 50 individuals older than 5 years old (without the 2003 dataset!) Preliminary results showing female survival decreasing with age:

  10. Females’ survival Full-age dependant model : (a) p

  11. 3 age classes: 1 juvenile stage, 1 prime-age stage, 1 senescent stage 2 age classes: 1 juvenile stage, 1 adult stage Females’ survival

  12. Females’ survival Likelihood Ratio Test between Model with 2 adult classes: ]1 yr, 5yr[; >5 yr and Model with 1 adult class: >1 yr Chi-sq. df Prob. ------------------------- 29.521 7 0.0001 => 2 stages for adults => Senescence

  13. Females’ survival

  14.  =0.690.21 Model with 1 juvenile class and 1 adult class  (j; >1 yr) p(t) Males’ survival

  15. Males’ survival • No senescence for males? • Senescence later in life? • Strong selection on males => only the best males survive until 5 years and more?

  16. Some theories explain the existence of senescence by the existence of reproduction costs => Important to study the reproduction costs to understand the effects of age on reproduction/survival

  17. Expression of the costs of reproduction according to food availability ? Previous experimental work: Koskela et al. 1998 on Bank Vole =>Manipulation of reproductive effort =>Manipulation of environmental conditions • Systems allowing such manipulations are rare!!!

  18. Food addition Increased +2 No food addition Litter size Food addition Decreased -2 No food addition Experimental project Red squirrel at Kluane: • Litter size manipulation (Humphries and Boutin 2000) • Food addition (seed buckets) 2 treatments experiment:

  19. Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Food add Group 4 increased No food Litter size Food add decreased No food Experimental project Hypotheses: Success Group 1 = Success Group 3 Success Group 2 < Success Group 4 significant cost of reproduction when food scarcity

  20. Experimental project Red squirrel at Kluane: Year 2004: low food availability (low cone production since 1999, and very low in 2003) • Red squirrels should respond to experimental food addition • Good opportunity to study the expression of reproductive costs according to food availability

  21. Survival Population Dynamic trade-off Year of birth Age Reproduction Conclusion

More Related