Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.

We studied the response of the barn owl annual productivity to the common vole population numbers and variability to test the effects of environmental stochasticity on their life histories. Current theory predicts that temporal environmental variability can affect long-term nonlinear responses (e.g....

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Main Authors: Petr Pavluvčík, Karel Poprach, Ivo Machar, Jan Losík, Ana Gouveia, Emil Tkadlec
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4692510?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e80b473f0d1546b2b432417d4d712d302020-11-25T01:47:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011012e014585110.1371/journal.pone.0145851Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.Petr PavluvčíkKarel PoprachIvo MacharJan LosíkAna GouveiaEmil TkadlecWe studied the response of the barn owl annual productivity to the common vole population numbers and variability to test the effects of environmental stochasticity on their life histories. Current theory predicts that temporal environmental variability can affect long-term nonlinear responses (e.g., production of young) both positively and negatively, depending on the shape of the relationship between the response and environmental variables. At the level of the Czech Republic, we examined the shape of the relationship between the annual sum of fledglings (annual productivity) and vole numbers in both non-detrended and detrended data. At the districts' level, we explored whether the degree of synchrony (measured by the correlation coefficient) and the strength of the productivity response increase (measured by the regression coefficient) in areas with higher vole population variability measured by the s-index. We found that the owls' annual productivity increased linearly with vole numbers in the Czech Republic. Furthermore, based on district data, we also found that synchrony between dynamics in owls' reproductive output and vole numbers increased with vole population variability. However, the strength of the response was not affected by the vole population variability. Additionally, we have shown that detrending remarkably increases the Taylor's exponent b relating variance to mean in vole time series, thereby reversing the relationship between the coefficient of variation and the mean. This shift was not responsible for the increased synchrony with vole population variability. Instead, we suggest that higher synchrony could result from high food specialization of owls on the common vole in areas with highly fluctuating vole populations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4692510?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Petr Pavluvčík
Karel Poprach
Ivo Machar
Jan Losík
Ana Gouveia
Emil Tkadlec
spellingShingle Petr Pavluvčík
Karel Poprach
Ivo Machar
Jan Losík
Ana Gouveia
Emil Tkadlec
Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Petr Pavluvčík
Karel Poprach
Ivo Machar
Jan Losík
Ana Gouveia
Emil Tkadlec
author_sort Petr Pavluvčík
title Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.
title_short Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.
title_full Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.
title_fullStr Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.
title_full_unstemmed Barn Owl Productivity Response to Variability of Vole Populations.
title_sort barn owl productivity response to variability of vole populations.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description We studied the response of the barn owl annual productivity to the common vole population numbers and variability to test the effects of environmental stochasticity on their life histories. Current theory predicts that temporal environmental variability can affect long-term nonlinear responses (e.g., production of young) both positively and negatively, depending on the shape of the relationship between the response and environmental variables. At the level of the Czech Republic, we examined the shape of the relationship between the annual sum of fledglings (annual productivity) and vole numbers in both non-detrended and detrended data. At the districts' level, we explored whether the degree of synchrony (measured by the correlation coefficient) and the strength of the productivity response increase (measured by the regression coefficient) in areas with higher vole population variability measured by the s-index. We found that the owls' annual productivity increased linearly with vole numbers in the Czech Republic. Furthermore, based on district data, we also found that synchrony between dynamics in owls' reproductive output and vole numbers increased with vole population variability. However, the strength of the response was not affected by the vole population variability. Additionally, we have shown that detrending remarkably increases the Taylor's exponent b relating variance to mean in vole time series, thereby reversing the relationship between the coefficient of variation and the mean. This shift was not responsible for the increased synchrony with vole population variability. Instead, we suggest that higher synchrony could result from high food specialization of owls on the common vole in areas with highly fluctuating vole populations.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4692510?pdf=render
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