Herbivore population regulation and resource heterogeneity in a stochastic environment.

Date
2015-08
Authors
Hempson, G.P.
Illius, A.W.
Hendricks, H.H.
Bond, W.J.
Vetter, S.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Abstract
Large-mammal herbivore populations are subject to the interaction of internal density-dependent processes and external environmental stochasticity. We disentangle these processes by linking consumer population dynamics, in a highly stochastic environment, to the availability of their key forage resource via effects on body condition and subsequent fecundity and mortality rates. Body condition and demographic rate data were obtained by monitoring 500 tagged female goats in the Richtersveld National Park, South Africa, over a three-year period. Identifying the key resource and pathway to density dependence for a population allows environmental stochasticity to be partitioned into that which has strong feedbacks to population stability, and that which does not. Our data reveal a densitydependent seasonal decline in goat body condition in response to concomitant densitydependent depletion of the dry-season forage resource. The loss in body condition reduced density-dependent pregnancy rates, litter sizes, and pre-weaning survival. Survival was lowest following the most severe dry season and for juveniles. Adult survival in the late-dry season depended on body condition in the mid-dry season. Population growth was determined by the length of the dry season and the population size in the previous year. The RNP goat population is thereby dynamically coupled primarily to its dry-season forage resource. Extreme environmental variability thus does not decouple consumer resource dynamics, in contrast to the views of nonequilibrium protagonists.
Description
Keywords
African semi-arid grazing system, Capital-income breeder, Consumer resource dynamics, Density dependence, Dry season, Environmental stochasticity, Equilibrium, Key resource, Life history strategy, Nonequilibrium, Rangeland debate, Wet season, body condition, data set, goat, grazing pressure, herbivory, heterogeneity, life history trait, plant-herbivore interaction, population dynamics, population size, population structure, rangeland, stochasticity, survival, weaning
Citation
Hempson, G.P. et al. 2015. Herbivore population regulation and resource heterogeneity in a stochastic environment. Ecology 96(8), pp. 2170-2180