Linking Individual Performance to Density-Dependent Population Dynamics to Understand Temperature-Mediated Genotype Coexistence
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| Publication date | 09-2025 |
| Journal | Ecology Letters |
| Article number | e70214 |
| Volume | Issue number | 28 | 9 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
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| Abstract |
The persistence of local populations exposed to climate change depends
on their adaptive potential and on the ability of local individuals to
compete with migrating conspecifics tracking environmental shifts.
Modern coexistence theory (MCT) offers a framework for studying such
competitive interactions among genotypes. However, MCT often focuses on
emerging population-level outcomes, aggregating over the underlying
individual-level interactions. We present a cross-scale application of
MCT, combining it with an Integral Projection Model (IPM), explicitly
connecting individual performance to population-level dynamics. We
parameterise our model using experimental data on competing Daphnia
genotypes from two latitudes. Consistent with observations, our model
shows that higher temperatures increase the likelihood of competitive
exclusion of Northern genotypes by Southern genotypes. Moreover, it
reveals latitudinal variation in neonate sex ratios as a driver of
temperature-dependent evolutionary shifts. By identifying vital rates
underlying population-level competitive outcomes, our approach preserves
the straightforward theoretical interpretability of MCT, while
providing enhanced process-level resolution through IPMs.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.70214 |
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