Complex population dynamics and complex causation: devils, details and demography
- 29 March 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 273 (1591) , 1173-1181
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2006.3495
Abstract
Population dynamics result from the interplay of density-independent and density-dependent processes. Understanding this interplay is important, especially for being able to predict near-term population trajectories for management. In recent years, the study of model systems—experimental, observational and theoretical—has shed considerable light on the way that the both density-dependent and -independent aspects of the environment affect population dynamics via impacting on the organism's life history and therefore demography. These model-based approaches suggest that (i) individuals in different states differ in their demographic performance, (ii) these differences generate structure that can fluctuate independently of current total population size and so can influence the dynamics in important ways, (iii) individuals are strongly affected by both current and past environments, even when the past environments may be in previous generations and (iv) dynamics are typically complex and transient due to environmental noise perturbing complex population structures. For understanding population dynamics of any given system, we suggest that ‘the devil is in the detail’. Experimental dissection of empirical systems is providing important insights into the details of the drivers of demographic responses and therefore dynamics and should also stimulate theory that incorporates relevant biological mechanism.Keywords
This publication has 108 references indexed in Scilit:
- Using reproductive value to estimate key parameters in density-independent age-structured populationsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2007
- Sprint research runs into a credibility gapNature, 2004
- Changes in Dispersal during Species’ Range ExpansionsThe American Naturalist, 2004
- Visibility of the impact of environmental noise: a response to Kaitala and RantaProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2004
- Does maternal condition or predation risk influence small mammal population dynamics?Oikos, 2004
- Dietary effects on life history traits in a terrestrial isopod: the importance of evaluating maternal effects and trade-offsOecologia, 2004
- Talkin’ 'bout My Generation: Environmental Variability and Cohort EffectsThe American Naturalist, 2003
- The evolution of population stability as a by-product of life-history evolutionProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2003
- Visibility of demography‐modulating noise in population dynamicsOikos, 2002
- What causes generation cycles in populations of stored‐product moths?Journal of Animal Ecology, 2000