From Insects to Frogs, Egg–Juvenile Recruitment Can Have Persistent Effects on Population Sizes
Abstract
Understanding what regulates population sizes of organisms with complex life cycles is challenging because limits on population sizes can occur at any stage or transition. We extend a conceptual framework to explore whether numbers of successfully laid eggs determine densities of later stages in insects, fish, amphibians, and snails inhabiting marine, freshwater, or terrestrial habitats. Our review suggests novel hypotheses, which propose characteristics of species or environments that create spatial variation in egg densities and predict when such patterns are maintained throughout subsequent life-cycle stages. Existing data, although limited, suggest that persistent, strong associations between egg and subsequent juvenile densities are likely for species where suitable egg-laying habitat is in short supply. Those associations are weakened in some environments and for some species by density-dependent losses of eggs or hatchlings. Such cross-ecosystem comparisons are fundamental to generality in ecology but demand place-based understandings of species’ biology and natural history.
Local Knowledge Graph (12 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Hydrologic and behavioral constraints on oviposition of stream insects: implications for adult dispersal
Shifts in natural isotopic signatures of animals with complex life-cycles can complicate conclusions on cross-boundary trophic links
The influence of recruitment on within-generation population dynamics of a mayfly
Data from: Lifetime fitness, sex-specific life history, and the maintenance of a polyphenism
Data from: Individual life histories: Neither slow nor fast, just diverse
Carry-over effects of larval food stress on adult energetics and life history in a nectar-feeding butterfly
Some Factors Historically Affecting The Distribution and Abundance of Fishes In The Gunnison River
Fish Passage Restoration Stream Habitat Restoration Guidelines: Final Draft
Small Mammals: A Beaver Pond Ecosystem and Adjacent Riparian Habitat in Idaho
Cited 13 times
References (99)
1 in Knowledge Hub, 98 external
