2016
DOI: 10.1890/15-0693.1
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Contrasting patterns of environmental fluctuation contribute to divergent life histories among amphibian populations

Abstract: International audienceBecause it modulates the fitness returns of possible options of energy expenditure at each ontogenetic stage, environmental stochasticity is usually considered a selective force in driving or constraining possible life histories. Divergent regimes of envi- ronmental fluctuation experienced by populations are expected to generate differences in the resource allocation schedule between survival and reproductive effort and outputs. To our knowledge, no study has previously examined how diffe… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(95 reference statements)
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“…The model had a robust design structure (Pollock, ), including both a primary period (years) and secondary sessions (capture sessions within years). We therefore made the assumption that survival probability was 1 between secondary sessions; this assumption was previously verified in this population (Cayuela, Arsovski, et al., 2016; see appendix 2 of the paper). To specify the state–state transitions at each step, a matrix was used in which the rows corresponded to the individual's state at t − 1, and the columns the possible states of arrival at t .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…The model had a robust design structure (Pollock, ), including both a primary period (years) and secondary sessions (capture sessions within years). We therefore made the assumption that survival probability was 1 between secondary sessions; this assumption was previously verified in this population (Cayuela, Arsovski, et al., 2016; see appendix 2 of the paper). To specify the state–state transitions at each step, a matrix was used in which the rows corresponded to the individual's state at t − 1, and the columns the possible states of arrival at t .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Considering the most realistic life cycle for the yellow‐bellied toad (Figure ) used in previous studies (e.g., Cayuela et al., ), we used a three age‐class (juveniles, subadults, and adults), female‐dominant, prebreeding Leslie matrix (Caswell, ) (Figure ). We used the prebreeding survival probability (juvenile survival, S 1 = 0.60; subadult survival, S 2 = 0.74) estimated in a previous study on this population (Cayuela, Arsovski, et al., 2016). Fecundity F was possible only for adult females and consisted of an estimation of recruitment, that is, the number of recruited juvenile females at t per breeding female at t − 1 ( F = 0.79) (Cayuela, Arsovski, et al., 2016).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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