Temporal variation in demographic processes can greatly impact population dynamics. Perturbations of statistical coefficients that describe demographic rates within matrix models have, for example, revealed that stochastic population growth rates (log( )) of fast life histories are more sensitive to temporal autocorrelation of environmental conditions than those of slow life histories. Yet, we know little about the mechanisms that drive such patterns. Here, we used a mechanistic, functional trait approach to examine the functional pathways by which a typical fast life history species, the macrodetrivore , and a typical slow life history species, the reef manta ray , differ in their sensitivity to environmental autocorrelation if (a) growth and reproduction are described mechanistically by functional traits that adhere to the principle of energy conservation, and if (b) demographic variation is determined by temporal autocorrelation in food conditions. Opposite to previous findings, we found that log( ) was most sensitive to the frequency of good food conditions, likely because reproduction traits, which directly impact population growth, were most influential to log( ). log( ) was instead most sensitive to temporal autocorrelation, likely because growth parameters, which impact population growth indirectly, were most influential to log( ). This differential sensitivity to functional traits likely also explains why we found that mean body size decreased (due to increased reproduction) but mean body size increased (due to increased individual growth) as food conditions became more favorable. Increasing demographic stochasticity under constant food conditions decreased mean body size and increased log( ) due to increased reproduction, whereas mean body and log( ) decreased, likely due to decreased individual growth. Our findings signify the importance of integrating functional traits into demographic models as this provides mechanistic understanding of how environmental and demographic stochasticity affects population dynamics in stochastic environments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6706206PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5485DOI Listing

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