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Drought survival is a threshold function of habitat size and population density in a fish metapopulation
Authors:Richard S A White  Peter A McHugh  Angus R McIntosh
Institution:1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand;2. Department of Watershed Sciences, Utah State University and Eco Logical Research Inc., Logan, UT, USA
Abstract:Because smaller habitats dry more frequently and severely during droughts, habitat size is likely a key driver of survival in populations during climate change and associated increased extreme drought frequency. Here, we show that survival in populations during droughts is a threshold function of habitat size driven by an interaction with population density in metapopulations of the forest pool dwelling fish, Neochanna apoda. A mark–recapture study involving 830 N. apoda individuals during a one‐in‐seventy‐year extreme drought revealed that survival during droughts was high for populations occupying pools deeper than 139 mm, but declined steeply in shallower pools. This threshold was caused by an interaction between increasing population density and drought magnitude associated with decreasing habitat size, which acted synergistically to increase physiological stress and mortality. This confirmed two long‐held hypotheses, firstly concerning the interactive role of population density and physiological stress, herein driven by habitat size, and secondly, the occurrence of drought survival thresholds. Our results demonstrate how survival in populations during droughts will depend strongly on habitat size and highlight that minimum habitat size thresholds will likely be required to maximize survival as the frequency and intensity of droughts are projected to increase as a result of global climate change.
Keywords:climate change  disturbance  ecological threshold  extreme environmental events  fish  land‐use change  mortality  survival
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