Abstract

A changing environment directly influences birth and mortality rates, and thus population growth rates. However, population growth rates in the short term are also influenced by population age-structure. Despite its importance, the contribution of age-structure to population growth rates has rarely been explored empirically in wildlife populations with long-term demographic data. Here we assessed how changes in age-structure influenced short-term population dynamics in a semi-captive population of Asian elephants Elephas maximus. We addressed this question using a demographic dataset of female Asian elephants from timber camps in Myanmar spanning 45years (1970-2014). First, we explored temporal variation in age-structure. Then, using annual matrix population models, we used a retrospective approach to assess the contributions of age-structure and vital rates to short-term population growth rates with respect to the average environment. Age-structure was highly variable over the study period, with large proportions of juveniles in the years 1970 and 1985, and made a substantial contribution to annual population growth rate deviations. High adult birth rates between 1970 and 1980 would have resulted in large positive population growth rates, but these were prevented by a low proportion of reproductive-aged females. We highlight that an understanding of both age-specific vital rates and age-structure is needed to assess short-term population dynamics. Furthermore, this example from a human-managed system suggests that the importance of age-structure may be accentuated in populations experiencing human disturbance where age-structure is unstable, such as those in captivity or for endangered species. Ultimately, changes to the environment drive population dynamics by influencing birth and mortality rates, but understanding demographic structure is crucial for assessing population growth.

Highlights

  • Population growth rates are valuable indicators of a population's trajectory, informing us about how they may respond to changes in their environment

  • Changes to the environment drive population dynamics by influencing birth and mortality rates, but understanding demographic structure is crucial for assessing population growth

  • As age-specific birth and mortality rates, or ‘vital rates’, are directly impacted by the environment (Pardo, Barbraud, Authier, & Weimerskirch, 2013; Stearns, 1992; Weimerskirch, 2018), past environmental perturbations to these rates may result in changes to age-structure, which eventually lead to persistent differences in population size relative to a population at stable age-structure (Koons, Holmes, & Grand, 2007)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Population growth rates are valuable indicators of a population's trajectory, informing us about how they may respond to changes in their environment. We used an extensive multigenerational demographic studbook (N = 2,223) of captive-born female Asian elephants Elephas maximus from Myanmar, from 1970 to 2014 This long-term, individual-based dataset enables us to accurately capture variation in age-structure and individual life histories over several decades (Chapman, Jackson, Htut, Lummaa, & Lahdenperä, 2019), with which we can estimate vital rates and. By capturing short-term, transient population dynamics in each year with matrix population models, we used a retrospective approach to assess the contributions of age-structure and vital rates to deviations in annual population growth rates, with respect to the average environment

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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