Abstract
Climate projections forecast more extreme interannual climate variability over time, with an increase in the severity and duration of extreme drought and rainfall events. Based on bioclimatic envelope models, it is projected that changing precipitation patterns will drastically alter the spatial distributions and density of plants and be a primary driver of biodiversity loss. However, many other underlying mechanisms can impact plant vital rates (i.e., survival, growth, and reproduction) and population dynamics. In this study, we developed a size‐dependent integral projection model (IPM) to evaluate how interannual precipitation and mollusk herbivory influence the dynamics of a Hawaii endemic short‐lived shrub, Schiedea obovata (Caryophyllaceae). Assessing how wet season precipitation effects population dynamics it critical, as it is the timeframe when most of the foliar growth occurs, plants flower and fruit, and seedlings establish. Temporal variation in wet season precipitation had a greater effect than mollusk herbivory on S. obovata population growth rate λ, and the impact of interannual precipitation on vital rates shifted across plant ontogeny. Furthermore, wet season precipitation influenced multiple vital rates in contrasting ways and the effect of precipitation on the survival of larger vegetative and reproductively mature individuals contributed the most to variation in the population growth rate. Among all combination of wet season precipitation and herbivory intensities, the only scenario that led to a growing population was when high wet precipitation was associated with low herbivory. Our study highlights the importance of evaluating how abiotic factors and plant–consumer interactions influence an organism across its life cycle to fully understand the underpinning mechanisms that structure its spatial and temporal distribution and abundance. Our results also illustrate that for short‐lived species, like S. obovata, seedling herbivory can have less of an effect on the dynamics of plant populations than decreased interannual precipitation.
Highlights
Plant endangerment is driven by complex interactions of multiple environmental stressors, which can have varying effects on plant vital rates and population dynamics (Brook, Sodhi, & Bradshaw, 2008)
To evaluate the effect of wet season precipitation and mollusk herbivory on S. obovata population dynamics, we developed a continuous size-dependent integral projection model
The proportional decrease in seedling survival s (x, a, b) of the survival-growth function p (y, x, a, b) that we used for the high herbivory models (HP-HH and low wet season precipitation (LP)-HH) was based on the results reported in Kawelo et al (2012)
Summary
Plant endangerment is driven by complex interactions of multiple environmental stressors, which can have varying effects on plant vital rates and population dynamics (Brook, Sodhi, & Bradshaw, 2008). The independent influences of these environmental stressors on various components of plant fitness (e.g., seedling survival) have been well examined and often used to prioritize restoration actions (Cowie, Dillon, Robinson, & Smith, 2009; Hanley, Fenner, & Edwards, 1995; Joe & Daehler, 2007; Orians, Fritz, Hochwender, Albrectsen, & Czesak, 2013; Parmesan, 2006; Pender, Shiels, Bialic- Murphy, & Mosher, 2013) From those studies, we have gained an in- depth understanding of the direct impacts of various environmental stressors on targeted vital rates of native species. | 3 survival, growth, and fertility) drive differences in population growth rates between years that vary in wet season precipitation?
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