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Evaluating the demographic buffering hypothesis with vital rates estimated for Weddell seals from 30years of mark-recapture data

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Evaluating the demographic buffering hypothesis with vital rates estimated for Weddell seals from 30years of mark-recapture data; 2012; Article; Journal; Journal of Animal Ecology; Rotella, J. J.; Link, W. A.; Chambert, T.; Stauffer, G. E.; Garrott, R. A.

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1.Life-history theory predicts that those vital rates that make larger contributions to population growth rate ought to be more strongly buffered against environmental variability than are those that are less important. Despite the importance of the theory for predicting demographic responses to changes in the environment, it is not yet known how pervasive demographic buffering is in animal populations because the validity of most existing studies has been called into question because of methodological deficiencies. 2.We tested for demographic buffering in the southern-most breeding mammal population in the world using data collected from 5558 known-age female Weddell seals over 30years. We first estimated all vital rates simultaneously [...]

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Type Scheme Key
local-index unknown 70032480
local-pk unknown 70032480
doi http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/mods-outline-3-5.html#identifier doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2011.01902.x
series unknown Journal of Animal Ecology

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citationTypeArticle
journalJournal of Animal Ecology
languageEnglish
parts
typevolume
value81
typeissue
value1

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