Experimental and theoretical studies show that mortality imposed on a population can counter-intuitively increase the density of a specific life-history stage or total population density. Understanding positive population-level effects of mortality is advancing, illuminating implications for population, community, and applied ecology. Reconciling theory and data, we found that the mathematical models used to study mortality effects vary in the effects predicted and mechanisms proposed. Experiments predominantly demonstrate stage-specific density increases in response to mortality. We argue that the empirical evidence supports theory based on stage-structured population models but not on unstructured models. We conclude that stage-specific positive mortality effects are likely to be common in nature and that accounting for within-population individual variation is essential for developing ecological theory.
When less is more: positive population-level effects of mortality
Rezensierter Artikel , Projekt BType

Schröder, A., van Leeuwen, A., Cameron, T. C. (2014). When less is more: positive population-level effects of mortality. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 29, 614-624
Veröffentlicht
: 2014
Erschienen in
: Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 29, 614-624