Please note: We are currently experiencing some performance issues across the site, and some pages may be slow to load. We are working on restoring normal service soon. Importing new articles from Word documents is also currently unavailable. We apologize for any inconvenience.

loading page

Reproductive dispersion and damping time scale with life-history speed
  • +4
  • Sha Jiang,
  • Harman Jaggi,
  • WENYUN ZUO,
  • Madan Oli,
  • Tim Coulson,
  • Jean-Michel Gaillard,
  • Shripad Tuljapurkar
Sha Jiang
Stanford University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Harman Jaggi
Stanford University
Author Profile
WENYUN ZUO
Stanford University
Author Profile
Madan Oli
University of Florida
Author Profile
Tim Coulson
Oxford
Author Profile
Jean-Michel Gaillard
UMR-CNRS 5558
Author Profile
Shripad Tuljapurkar
Stanford University
Author Profile

Abstract

Generation time has previously been the focus of comparative life history analyses. Here we examine three metrics: generation time Tc, reproductive dispersion S (the distribution of ages of reproduction), and damping time τ (time to converge to stable (st)age distribution). We use data on 633 species of animals and plants, and perform phylogenetically corrected analyses. First we find that S varies allometrically and isometrically with Tc. As a result, τ varies allometrically with either Tc or S but not both. Second, we find a trade-off between τ and S, so that τ does not vary isometrically with Tc. This trade-off is a novel demographic component to the relationship between τ, Tc and S that is otherwise partly determined by their similarity as biological times. Our results indicate that species at the slow end of the slow-fast continuum take longer to converge to stable distribution than species with fast life-histories.
Sep 2022Published in Ecology Letters volume 25 issue 9 on pages 1999-2008. 10.1111/ele.14080