TY - JOUR AU - Rémi Fay, Christophe Barbraud PY - 2018// TI - From early life to senescence: individual heterogeneity in a long-lived seabird KW - capture–mark–recapture delayed density effect Diomedea exulans finite mixture model individual quality population dynamics Wandering Albatross N2 - Although population studies have long assumed that all individuals of a given sex and age are identical, ignoring among-individual differences may strongly bias our perception of eco-evolutionary processes. Individual heterogeneity, often referred to as individual quality, has received increasing research attention in the last decades. However, there are still substantial gaps in our current knowledge. For example, there is little information on how individual heterogeneity influences various life-history traits simultaneously, and studies describing individual heterogeneity in wild populations are generally not able to jointly identify possible sources of this variation. Here, based on a mark–recapture data set of 9,685 known-aged Wandering Albatrosses (Diomedea exulans), we investigated the existence of individual quality over the entire life cycle of this species, from early life to senescence. Using finite mixture models, we investigated the expression of individual heterogeneity in various demographic traits, and examined the origin of these among-individual differences by considering the natal environmental conditions. We found that some individuals consistently outperformed others during most of their life. In old age, however, the senescence rate was stronger in males that showed high demographic performance at younger ages. Variation in individual quality seemed strongly affected by extrinsic factors experienced during the ontogenetic period. We found that individuals born in years with high population density tended to have lower performances during their lifespan, suggesting delayed density dependence effects through individual quality. Our study showed that among-individual differences could be important in structuring individual life history trajectories, with substantial consequences at higher ecological levels such as population dynamics. SN - 1557-7015 SN - 1557-7015 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecm.1275 N1 - exported from refbase (http://publi.ipev.fr/polar_references/show.php?record=7190), last updated on Tue, 09 Jul 2024 08:23:37 +0200 ID - RemiFay2018 ER -