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Long-term demographic dynamics of a keystone scavenger disrupted by human-induced shifts in food availability
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Title: Long-term demographic dynamics of a keystone scavenger disrupted by human-induced shifts in food availability |
Authors: Almaraz, Pablo Martínez, Félix Morales-Reyes, Zebensui Sanchez-Zapata, Jose Antonio Blanco, Guillermo |
Editor: Wiley |
Department: Departamentos de la UMH::Biología Aplicada |
Issue Date: 2022-03-13 |
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/33976 |
Abstract:
Scavenging is a key ecological process controlling energy flow in ecosystems and
providing valuable ecosystem services worldwide. As long-lived species, the demographic dynamics of vultures can be disrupted by spatiotemporal fluctuations in
food availability, with dramatic impacts on their population viability and the ecosystem services provided. In Europe, the outbreak of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in 2001 prompted a restrictive sanitary regulation banning the
presence of livestock carcasses in the wild on a continental scale. In long-lived vertebrate species, the buffering hypothesis predicts that the demographic traits with
the largest contribution to population growth rate should be less temporally variable. The BSE outbreak provides a unique opportunity to test for the impact of
demographic buffering in a keystone scavenger suffering abrupt but transient food
shortages. We studied the 42-year dynamics (1979–2020) of one of the world’s largest breeding colonies of Eurasian griffon vultures (Gyps fulvus). We fitted an
inverse Bayesian state-space model with density-dependent demographic rates to
the time series of stage-structured abundances to investigate shifts in vital rates
and population dynamics before, during, and after the implementation of a restrictive sanitary regulation. Prior to the BSE outbreak the dynamics was mainly driven
by adult survival: 83% of temporal variance in abundance was explained by variability in this rate. Moreover, during this period the regulation of population size
operated through density-dependent fecundity and subadult survival. However,
after the onset of the European ban, a 1-month delay in average laying date, a drop
in fecundity, and a reduction in the number of fledglings induced a transient
increase in the impact of fledgling and subadult recruitment on dynamics.
Although adult survival rate remained constantly high, as predicted by the buffering hypothesis, its relative impact on the temporal variance in abundance dropped
to 71% during the sanitary regulation and to 54% after the ban was lifted. A significant increase in the relative impact of environmental stochasticity on dynamics
was modeled after the BSE outbreak. These results provide empirical evidence on
how abrupt environmental deterioration may induce dramatic demographic and
dynamic changes in the populations of keystone scavengers, with far-reaching
impacts on ecosystem functioning worldwide.
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Keywords/Subjects: carrion inverse demographic modeling mad cow disease matrix modeling scavenging state-space modeling vultures |
Knowledge area: CDU: Ciencias puras y naturales: Biología |
Type of document: application/pdf |
Access rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2579 |
Appears in Collections: Artículos Biología Aplicada
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