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Consistent within-individual plasticity is sufficient to explain temperature responses in red deer reproductive traits

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Authors

Froy, Hannah
Martin, Julien
Stopher, Katie V.
Morris, Alison
Morris, Sean
Clutton-Brock, Tim H.
Pemberton, Josephine M.
Kruuk, Loeske

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Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Abstract

Warming global temperatures are affecting a range of aspects of wild populations, but the exact mechanisms driving associations between temperature and phenotypic traits may be difficult to identify. Here, we use a 36‐year data set on a wild popula‐tion of red deer to investigate the causes of associations between temperature and two important components of female reproduction: timing of breeding and offspring size. By separating within‐ versus between‐individual associations with temperature for each trait, we show that within‐individual phenotypic plasticity (changes within a female's lifetime) was entirely sufficient to generate the observed population‐level association with temperature at key times of year. However, despite apparently ad‐equate statistical power, we found no evidence of any variation between females in their responses (i.e. no "IxE" interactions). Our results suggest that female deer show plasticity in reproductive traits in response to temperatures in the year leading up to calving and that this response is consistent across individuals, implying no potential for either selection or heritability of plasticity. We estimate that the plastic response to rising temperatures explained 24% of the observed advance in mean calving date over the study period. We highlight the need for comparable analyses of other sys‐tems to determine the contribution of within‐individual plasticity to population‐level responses to climate change.

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Citation

Froy H, Martin J, Stopher KV, et al. Consistent within‐individual plasticity is sufficient to explain temperature responses in red deer reproductive traits. J Evol Biol. 2019;32:1194–1206. https://doi.org/10.1111/jeb.13521

Source

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution License

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