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Population demography of the endangered large blue butterfly Maculinea arion in Europe
Authors:Márta Osváth-Ferencz  Simona Bonelli  Piotr Nowicki  László Peregovits  László Rákosy  Marcin Sielezniew  Agata Kostro-Ambroziak  Izabela Dziekańska  Ádám Kőrösi
Affiliation:1.Hungarian Department of Biology and Ecology,Babe?-Bolyai University,Cluj-Napoca,Romania;2.Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology,Turin University,Turin,Italy;3.Institute of Environmental Sciences,Jagiellonian University,Kraków,Poland;4.Department of Zoology,Hungarian Natural History Museum,Budapest,Hungary;5.Department of Taxonomy and Ecology,Babe?-Bolyai University,Cluj-Napoca,Romania;6.Department of Invertebrate Zoology, Institute of Biology,University of Bialystok,Bia?ystok,Poland;7.Association for Butterfly Conservation (TOM),Warszawa,Poland;8.MTA-ELTE-MTM, Ecology Research Group,Budapest,Hungary
Abstract:
Demographic parameters such as survival, sex ratio and abundance can profoundly affect the viability of populations and thus are of primary importance in species of conservation concern. Although numerous studies have been published on certain aspects of the ecology and evolution of the endangered Large Blue butterfly Maculinea arion, there is still a lack of detailed knowledge on its populations’ demography. Moreover, M. arion populates a variety of xerothermic habitats throughout its European range using various food plants and host ants, which leads to complications in its conservation. Our aim was to estimate demographic parameters of M. arion populations in different parts of its European range. Detailed mark-recapture sampling was conducted on populations in four different countries. We often found that daily apparent survival probability declined with increasing age of individuals, but there was no difference between male and female survival. In smaller populations, the sex ratio was rather female-biased. Our most interesting result was the lack of protandry in some populations that might be a consequence of selection against reproductive asynchrony in small populations or a polyandrous mating system. The perfect coincidence of male and female phenology can positively affect the effective population size, because the lack of reproductive asynchrony increases the chance of male–female encounters. Abundance of the studied populations ranged between 100 and 1,600 individuals, smaller populations were on the verge of extinction. Habitat of the threatened small populations was either overgrazed or abandoned, while habitat of larger, stable populations was lightly grazed.
Keywords:
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