2023
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10346
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Early life conditions influence fledging success and subsequent local recruitment rates in a declining migratory songbird, the Whinchat Saxicola rubetra

Abstract: Life history traits and environmental conditions influence reproductive success in animals, and consequences of these can influence subsequent survival and recruitment into breeding populations. Understanding influences on demographic rates is required to determine the causes of decline. Migratory species experience spatially and temporally variable conditions across their annual cycle, making identifying where the factors influencing demographic rates operate challenging. Here, we use the Whinchat Saxicola ru… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Early life conditions can have both short-and long-term consequences for fitness-related traits of offspring (Lindström, 1999). Short-term effects of early life conditions on offspring have been well characterized, and shown to affect offspring quality (e.g., pre-fledging body mass or condition) and survival, or probability of recruitment to the breeding population (Ancona et al, 2018;Halliwell et al, 2023). However, short-term effects of early life conditions on offspring are not always detected on fitness components over the long term, i.e., after local recruitment to the breeding population (Nevoux et al, 2010;Cam and Aubry, 2011;Mumme et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Early life conditions can have both short-and long-term consequences for fitness-related traits of offspring (Lindström, 1999). Short-term effects of early life conditions on offspring have been well characterized, and shown to affect offspring quality (e.g., pre-fledging body mass or condition) and survival, or probability of recruitment to the breeding population (Ancona et al, 2018;Halliwell et al, 2023). However, short-term effects of early life conditions on offspring are not always detected on fitness components over the long term, i.e., after local recruitment to the breeding population (Nevoux et al, 2010;Cam and Aubry, 2011;Mumme et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Early life conditions can have both short-and long-term consequences for fitness-related traits of offspring (Lindström, 1999). Short-term effects of early life conditions on offspring have been well characterized, and shown to affect offspring quality (e.g., pre-fledging body mass or condition) and survival, or probability of recruitment to the breeding population (Ancona et al, 2018;Halliwell et al, 2023). However, short-term effects of early life conditions on offspring are not always detected on fitness components over the long term, i.e., after local recruitment to the breeding population (Nevoux et al, 2010;Cam and Aubry, 2011;Mumme et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%