Population density and timing of breeding mediate effects of early life conditions on recruitment
Data files
Mar 24, 2025 version files 837.45 KB
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demography.csv
806 B
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README.md
4.44 KB
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recruit_data_final.csv
832.20 KB
Abstract
Identifying the factors driving juvenile recruitment is crucial for predicting the response of populations to environmental change. Importantly, how early life conditions carry over to influence recruitment may be highly dependent on the context in which they occur. For example, the effects of challenging early-life conditions may be more pronounced under high densities or when young are born late in the season. We examined the ecological factors influencing local recruitment spanning three decades in Savannah sparrows (Passerculus sandwichensis) breeding on Kent Island, NB, Canada. The effect of nestling mass on recruitment depended on both population density and fledging date. At low population densities or early in the breeding season, nestling mass had little effect on recruitment probability. At high population densities or later in the breeding season, mass had a stronger effect, with heavier individuals more likely to recruit. Lighter fledglings may have lower recruitment under challenging conditions due to lower competitive ability, lower mobility, and greater susceptibility to resource limitation relative to heavier, better-condition fledglings. Our findings have important implications for life history evolution and selection on body size in a changing world, highlighting the relationships between population density, time of breeding, and offspring recruitment.
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.rxwdbrvm1
Description of the data and file structure
Files and variables
In all files, missing values are represented by “NA.”
File: demography.csv
Description: This dataset contains the annual population density on the study site.
Variables
- year: Year.
- annual_density: The annual population density in birds/ha, defined as the number of breeding adults on the study site divided by the area of the study site (10.7 ha).
File: recruit_data_final.csv
Description: Dataset used for the analysis of factors influencing whether a fledgling recruited into the breeding population. Each record is one individual fledgling.
Variables
- nest_key: The identification key of the individual’s natal nest.
- year: The year in which the individual was born.
- eggs_laid: The clutch size (number of eggs) in the individual’s natal nest.
- female_id: The band number of the individual’s mother.
- male_id: The band number of the individual’s father.
- found_date: The date the individual’s natal nest was found.
- hatch_date: The date the eggs in the individual’s natal nest hatched.
- eggs_hatched: The number of eggs in the individual’s natal nest that hatched (brood size).
- fledglings: The number of young that fledged from the individual’s natal nest.
- fledge_date: The date the first young fledged from the individual’s natal nest.
- clutch_number: Whether the individual’s natal nest was a first brood (1), second brood (2), or replacement clutch (indicated with an R). Uncertainty in assignment is indicated with an E (for “estimated”).
- found_day: Ordinal day on which the individual’s natal nest was found.
- hatch_day: Ordinal day on which the eggs in the individual’s natal nest hatched.
- first_egg_day: Ordinal day on which the first egg was laid in the individual’s natal nest.
- female_status: Mating status of the individual’s mother. MO = monogamously mated, PG 1 = primary female of a polygynous male, PG 2 = secondary female of a polygynous male.
- female_age: Age in years of the individual’s mother.
- female_age_code: Age code of the individual’s mother. SY = a yearling female breeding for the first time (1 year old). ASY = older than yearling (> 1 year old).
- male_age: Age in years of the individual’s father.
- male_age_code: Age code of the individual’s father. SY = a yearling male breeding for the first time (1 year old). ASY = older than yearling (> 1 year old).
- popn_size: Number of breeding adults on the study site in the year the individual was born.
- annual_density: Population density in birds/ha on the study site in the year the individual was born (number of breeding adults divided by the area of the study site, 10.7 ha).
- band_id: The individual’s band number (uniquely identifying).
- sex: The sex of the individual (unknown for most individuals). Individuals known to be male or female are represented by the codes “M” and “F” respectively. When the sex of the individual is thought to be male or female but is uncertain, it is represented by “M?” and “F?”. Individuals of unknown sex are represented by the code “U” or a missing value (“NA”).
- weight: Mass of the individual in grams.
- age_in_days: Age of the individual in days when banded. All individuals were banded at 7 days old.
- recruited: Whether the individual ever bred or was recaptured in the study area (logical, true or false).
- fledge_date_noNA: Fledge date with missing dates estimated (see the related article, Mueller et al. Biology Letters, for details).
- recruited.f: Whether the individual ever bred or was recaptured in the study area (binary, 1 if recruited, 0 if not).
- clutch_num: Whether the nest is a first brood (1) or second brood (2).
- fledge_day: Ordinal day on which the first young fledged from the individual’s natal nest.
Code/software
The attached code was used to run all analyses and generate all figures. Analyses were conducted using R (v. 4.4.0; R Core Team 2023). Models were fit using glmmTMB (v. 1.1.9; Brooks et al. 2017) and diagnostics checked using DHARMa (v. 0.4.6; Hartig 2022). Pairwise comparisons between levels of categorical variables were conducted using emmeans, adjusted for multiple comparisons using the Tukey method (v. 1.10.1; Lenth 2023).
We used 27 years of detailed demographic data on a population of Savannah sparrows (Passerculus sandwichensis) breeding on Kent Island, NB, Canada, to investigate the ecological factors influencing local recruitment of juveniles. All individuals breeding within the study area are marked with a unique combination of color bands and a USFWS aluminum band. Each year, we record the identities of all adults breeding on the study site. We find and monitor all nest attempts every year to produce reproductive data including hatching date; number of eggs, nestlings, and fledglings; and fledging or failure date of the nest. All nestlings and unbanded adults are banded and measured. Assignment of territories and mating status (monogamous or polygynous) are based on field observations of marked individuals.
This dataset consists of all individuals marked as nestlings on the study site. Individuals were considered to have recruited if they were resighted or recaptured as breeding adults on the study site in any year.