Time as an ecological constraint.

Conventional approaches to population biology emphasise the roles of climatic conditions, nutrient flow and predation as constraints on population dynamics. We argue here that this focus has obscured the role of time as a crucial constraint on species' abilities to survive in some habitats. Tim...

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Main Authors: Dunbar, R, Korstjens, A, Lehmann, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2009
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author Dunbar, R
Korstjens, A
Lehmann, J
author_facet Dunbar, R
Korstjens, A
Lehmann, J
author_sort Dunbar, R
collection OXFORD
description Conventional approaches to population biology emphasise the roles of climatic conditions, nutrient flow and predation as constraints on population dynamics. We argue here that this focus has obscured the role of time as a crucial constraint on species' abilities to survive in some habitats. Time constraints may be particularly intrusive both for species that live in intensely bonded groups (where the need to devote time to social interaction may ultimately limit the size of group that a species can maintain in a particular habitat) and for taxa that face constraints on the length of the active day. We use a linear programming approach that allows us to specify both how time allocations to different activities are influenced by local environmental and climatic variables and how these in turn limit group size and population density. The linear programming approach identifies the realizable niche space within which a species can maintain coherent groups that are larger than the minimum viable group size (or density). This approach thus allow us to understand better why a given taxon can survive in some habitats but not others, as well as the demographic stress that a population may face. In addition, they also allow us to evaluate the implications of both past and future climate change for a taxon's ability to cope with particular habitats.
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spelling oxford-uuid:5ff3c181-10d3-48cf-a7b5-d1562543d87f2022-03-26T17:50:14ZTime as an ecological constraint.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5ff3c181-10d3-48cf-a7b5-d1562543d87fEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2009Dunbar, RKorstjens, ALehmann, JConventional approaches to population biology emphasise the roles of climatic conditions, nutrient flow and predation as constraints on population dynamics. We argue here that this focus has obscured the role of time as a crucial constraint on species' abilities to survive in some habitats. Time constraints may be particularly intrusive both for species that live in intensely bonded groups (where the need to devote time to social interaction may ultimately limit the size of group that a species can maintain in a particular habitat) and for taxa that face constraints on the length of the active day. We use a linear programming approach that allows us to specify both how time allocations to different activities are influenced by local environmental and climatic variables and how these in turn limit group size and population density. The linear programming approach identifies the realizable niche space within which a species can maintain coherent groups that are larger than the minimum viable group size (or density). This approach thus allow us to understand better why a given taxon can survive in some habitats but not others, as well as the demographic stress that a population may face. In addition, they also allow us to evaluate the implications of both past and future climate change for a taxon's ability to cope with particular habitats.
spellingShingle Dunbar, R
Korstjens, A
Lehmann, J
Time as an ecological constraint.
title Time as an ecological constraint.
title_full Time as an ecological constraint.
title_fullStr Time as an ecological constraint.
title_full_unstemmed Time as an ecological constraint.
title_short Time as an ecological constraint.
title_sort time as an ecological constraint
work_keys_str_mv AT dunbarr timeasanecologicalconstraint
AT korstjensa timeasanecologicalconstraint
AT lehmannj timeasanecologicalconstraint