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Do El Nino events beget generations of reproductively deficient adults?

Ortega, S.; Rodriguez, C.; Drummond, H.

2019-08-13 ecology
10.1101/594226 bioRxiv
Show abstract

O_LIWarm ocean waters during El Nino events deplete primary productivity, with cascading effects through the food chain that profoundly affect many marine and terrestrial species, commonly increasing adult mortality and offspring starvation. With global warming, events will double and increasingly threaten the depletion or extinction of some animal populations.\nC_LIO_LIBecause adverse environments experienced during infancy generally induce reproductive deficits in adulthood, El Nino events are also expected to affect animals born during them, engendering generations of adults with reduced reproductive potential and exacerbating demographic impacts.\nC_LIO_LIWe made the first test of this idea, using the blue-footed booby, a piscivorous apex predator of the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Surprisingly, detailed monitoring of 18 generations over a 27-year period detected no deficits in the annual breeding success, offspring viability, lifespan or lifetime reproductive success of generations of adults born during El Nino years.\nC_LIO_LIThese results testify to remarkable developmental resilience extending across the lifespan. However, there was evidence that this resilience was supported by two mechanisms of quality control of adult generations from El Nino years.\nC_LIO_LIFirst, viability selection on nestlings and fledglings was more severe for El Nino birth cohorts than ordinary cohorts.\nC_LIO_LISecond, in El Nino years, adult boobies self-selected for breeding. There was no increase in the proportional representation of either high quality breeders or breeders in their peak years (middle-age), but there was an increase in old-young adult pairings, which in this population produce the most viable fledglings.\nC_LIO_LIThe blue-footed booby appears to be immune to the expected developmental impact of El Nino on the reproductive value of adult generations. The susceptibilities and resilience of other species need to be explored, to better predict the demographic impacts of this accelerating climatic oscillation.\nC_LI

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