The trade-off between current and future investment in reproduction lies at the heart of life history theory. The need to differentially allocate resources between these two options arises generally as a result of environmental pressures. Higher risk of mortality in adults is linked with increased investment in current reproduction, whereas the opposite is true where adults are long-lived (the r- K selection paradigm). Perhaps the most obvious factors influencing the environment stem from seasonality of the climate, since rainfall and temperature affect food availability, resulting in a higher risk of mortality. The available trade-offs that an organism can make will therefore be constrained by environmental variability potentially resultin...
Changes in climate are shifting the timing of life cycle events in the natural world. Compared to no...
Life history theory predicts an inverse relationship between annual adult survival and fecundity. Gl...
Life history theory attempts to explain why species differ in offspring number and quality, growth r...
In some tropical birds, breeding seasonality is weak at the population level, even where there are p...
Current thinking suggests that survival, and consequently lifespan of organisms, can be understood i...
The slow-paced life history of many Neotropical birds (e.g., high survival and low fecundity) is hyp...
Both mass (as a measure of body reserves) during breeding and adult survival should reflect variatio...
Seasonality influences life history through its effect on the availability of essential resources, w...
Changes in climate are shifting the timing of life cycle events in the natural world. Compared to no...
The slow-paced life history of many Neotropical birds (e.g., high survival and low fecundity) is hyp...
In order to maximise breeding success in a seasonally fluctuating environment animals breed during p...
Aim: Adult survival is central to theories explaining latitudinal gradients in life history strategi...
1. Changes in climate are shifting the timing of life cycle events in the natural world. Compared to...
Changes in climate are shifting the timing of life cycle events in the natural world. Compared to no...
Life history theory predicts an inverse relationship between annual adult survival and fecundity. Gl...
Life history theory attempts to explain why species differ in offspring number and quality, growth r...
In some tropical birds, breeding seasonality is weak at the population level, even where there are p...
Current thinking suggests that survival, and consequently lifespan of organisms, can be understood i...
The slow-paced life history of many Neotropical birds (e.g., high survival and low fecundity) is hyp...
Both mass (as a measure of body reserves) during breeding and adult survival should reflect variatio...
Seasonality influences life history through its effect on the availability of essential resources, w...
Changes in climate are shifting the timing of life cycle events in the natural world. Compared to no...
The slow-paced life history of many Neotropical birds (e.g., high survival and low fecundity) is hyp...
In order to maximise breeding success in a seasonally fluctuating environment animals breed during p...
Aim: Adult survival is central to theories explaining latitudinal gradients in life history strategi...
1. Changes in climate are shifting the timing of life cycle events in the natural world. Compared to...
Changes in climate are shifting the timing of life cycle events in the natural world. Compared to no...
Life history theory predicts an inverse relationship between annual adult survival and fecundity. Gl...
Life history theory attempts to explain why species differ in offspring number and quality, growth r...