Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.

Nonlethal disturbance of animals can cause behavioral and physiological changes that affect individual health status and vital rates, with potential consequences at the population level. Predicting these population effects remains a major challenge in ecology and conservation. Monitoring fitness-rel...

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Main Authors: Vincent Hin, John Harwood, André M de Roos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252677
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spelling doaj-93f064c48b2b4390a1b403e820b3044b2021-06-19T05:08:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01166e025267710.1371/journal.pone.0252677Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.Vincent HinJohn HarwoodAndré M de RoosNonlethal disturbance of animals can cause behavioral and physiological changes that affect individual health status and vital rates, with potential consequences at the population level. Predicting these population effects remains a major challenge in ecology and conservation. Monitoring fitness-related traits may improve detection of upcoming population changes, but the extent to which individual traits are reliable indicators of disturbance exposure is not well understood, especially for populations regulated by density dependence. Here we study how density dependence affects a population's response to disturbance and modifies the disturbance effects on individual health and vital rates. We extend an energy budget model for a medium-sized cetacean (the long-finned pilot whale Globicephala melas) to an individual-based population model in which whales feed on a self-replenishing prey base and disturbance leads to cessation of feeding. In this coupled predator-prey system, the whale population is regulated through prey depletion and the onset of yearly repeating disturbances on the whale population at carrying capacity decreased population density and increased prey availability due to reduced top-down control. In populations faced with multiple days of continuous disturbance each year, female whales that were lactating their first calf experienced increased mortality due to depletion of energy stores. However, increased prey availability led to compensatory effects and resulted in a subsequent improvement of mean female body condition, mean age at first reproduction and higher age-specific reproductive output. These results indicate that prey-mediated density dependence can mask negative effects of disturbance on fitness-related traits and vital rates, a result with implications for the monitoring and management of marine mammal populations.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252677
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vincent Hin
John Harwood
André M de Roos
spellingShingle Vincent Hin
John Harwood
André M de Roos
Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Vincent Hin
John Harwood
André M de Roos
author_sort Vincent Hin
title Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.
title_short Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.
title_full Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.
title_fullStr Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.
title_full_unstemmed Density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.
title_sort density dependence can obscure nonlethal effects of disturbance on life history of medium-sized cetaceans.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Nonlethal disturbance of animals can cause behavioral and physiological changes that affect individual health status and vital rates, with potential consequences at the population level. Predicting these population effects remains a major challenge in ecology and conservation. Monitoring fitness-related traits may improve detection of upcoming population changes, but the extent to which individual traits are reliable indicators of disturbance exposure is not well understood, especially for populations regulated by density dependence. Here we study how density dependence affects a population's response to disturbance and modifies the disturbance effects on individual health and vital rates. We extend an energy budget model for a medium-sized cetacean (the long-finned pilot whale Globicephala melas) to an individual-based population model in which whales feed on a self-replenishing prey base and disturbance leads to cessation of feeding. In this coupled predator-prey system, the whale population is regulated through prey depletion and the onset of yearly repeating disturbances on the whale population at carrying capacity decreased population density and increased prey availability due to reduced top-down control. In populations faced with multiple days of continuous disturbance each year, female whales that were lactating their first calf experienced increased mortality due to depletion of energy stores. However, increased prey availability led to compensatory effects and resulted in a subsequent improvement of mean female body condition, mean age at first reproduction and higher age-specific reproductive output. These results indicate that prey-mediated density dependence can mask negative effects of disturbance on fitness-related traits and vital rates, a result with implications for the monitoring and management of marine mammal populations.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252677
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