Sociality, individual fitness and population dynamics of yellow-bellied marmots
Abstract
Social behaviour was proposed as a density-dependent intrinsic mechanism that could regulate an animal population by affecting reproduction and dispersal. Populations of the polygynous yellow-bellied marmot (Marmota flaviventris) fluctuate widely from year to year primarily driven by the number of weaned young. The temporal variation in projected population growth rate was driven mainly by changes in the age of first reproduction and fertility, which are affected by reproductive suppression. Dispersal is unrelated to population density, or the presence of the father; hence, neither of these limits population growth or acts as an intrinsic mechanism of population regulation; overall, intrinsic regulation seems unlikely. Sociality affects the likelihood of reproduc- tion in that the annual probability of reproducing and the lifetime number of offspring are decreased by the number of older females and by the number of same-aged females present, but are increased by the number of younger adult females present. Recruitment of a yearling female is most likely when her mother is present; recruitment of philopatric females is much more important than immigration for increasing the number of adult female residents. Predation and overwinter mortality are the major factors limiting the number of resident adults. Social behaviour is not directed towards population regulation, but is best interpreted as functioning to maximize direct fitness.
Local Knowledge Graph (18 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Sociality and individual fitness in yellow-bellied marmots: insights from a long-term study (1962-2001)
Yellow-bellied marmot population dynamics: demographic mechanisms of growth and decline
Effects of food addition on life history of yellow-bellied marmots
Marmot mass gain rates relate to their group’s social structure
Data from: Cumulative reproductive costs on current reproduction in a wild polytocous mammal
Maternal survival costs in an asocial mammal: Data and analysis
An Ecological Basis for Beaver Management in the Rocky Mountain Region
Management of Livestock Herbivory in Relationship to Sage-grouse Habitats and Populations
Beaver Management in Grazed Riparian Ecosystems
Cited By (6)
Sick and alone? Evaluating how immune response is associated with social network position in yellow-bellied marmots
Early-life trade-offs in golden-mantled ground squirrel sociality and growth rate
The social microbiome: the relationship between the microbiome and sociality in a wild mammal
Hibernation as a major determinant of life-history traits in marmots
Environmentally induced phenotypic variation in wild yellow-bellied marmots
Long-term effects of litter sex ratio on female reproduction in two iteroparous mammals
References (47)
21 in Knowledge Hub, 26 external
