Recent exposure to environmental stochasticity does not determine the demographic resilience of natural populations

Author:

Cant James12ORCID,Capdevila Pol34ORCID,Beger Maria25,Salguero‐Gómez Roberto456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Biological Diversity University of St Andrews St Andrews UK

2. School of Biology, Faculty of Biological Sciences University of Leeds Leeds UK

3. School of Biological Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

4. Department of Zoology University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, School of Biological Sciences University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

6. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research Rostock Germany

Abstract

AbstractEscalating climatic and anthropogenic pressures expose ecosystems worldwide to increasingly stochastic environments. Yet, our ability to forecast the responses of natural populations to this increased environmental stochasticity is impeded by a limited understanding of how exposure to stochastic environments shapes demographic resilience. Here, we test the association between local environmental stochasticity and the resilience attributes (e.g. resistance, recovery) of 2242 natural populations across 369 animal and plant species. Contrary to the assumption that past exposure to frequent environmental shifts confers a greater ability to cope with current and future global change, we illustrate how recent environmental stochasticity regimes from the past 50 years do not predict the inherent resistance or recovery potential of natural populations. Instead, demographic resilience is strongly predicted by the phylogenetic relatedness among species, with survival and developmental investments shaping their responses to environmental stochasticity. Accordingly, our findings suggest that demographic resilience is a consequence of evolutionary processes and/or deep‐time environmental regimes, rather than recent‐past experiences.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Winifred Violet Scott Charitable Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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