6533b838fe1ef96bd12a4e93

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Maternal effects and the stability of population dynamics in noisy environments

Veijo KaitalaTim G. BentonAndrew P. BeckermanEsa Ranta

subject

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcologyLagPopulationMaternal effectBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesStability (probability)Life history theory03 medical and health sciencesComplex dynamicsDensity dependenceEconometricsAnimal Science and ZoologyEnvironmental noiseeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology

description

Summary 1. It is widely appreciated that complex population dynamics are more likely in systems where there is a lag in the density dependence. The transmission of maternal environmental conditions to offspring phenotype is a potential cause of such a lag. Maternal effects are increasingly found to be common in a wide range of organisms, and might thus be a frequent cause of nonequilibrium population dynamics. 2. We show that a maternal effects’ lag generally increases population variability. This may result from the lag inducing cycles (or more complex dynamics) in a deterministic environment or, in a stochastic environment, from the lag interacting with environmental noise to produce more variable dynamics than would otherwise occur. This may happen whether the underlying dynamics are equilibrium, periodic or more complex.

https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2656.2001.00527.x