Abstract

ABSTRACT Identifying the causes of individual variation in fitness should improve predictions about population dynamics and responses of populations to environmental change. Precise predictions may require long-term studies to parameterize models when the fitness of individual phenotypes depends on environmental conditions. We used a 37-yr study of a resident Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia) population to identify traits that predicted individual variation in female lifetime reproductive success and to test for context dependence in trait–fitness relationships. Specifically, we asked how individual inbreeding coefficient, maternal age, and a suite of natal morphological traits influenced 2 components of lifetime reproductive success: (1) the probability of surviving to breed, and (2) the lifetime number of offspring produced, given that a female bred locally. We then tested whether population density influenced trait–fitness relationships. We found that differences in natal traits had life-long impacts on...

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