Perspectives from animal demography on incorporating evolutionary mechanism into plant population dynamics

Main Article Content

Maria Paniw

Abstract

Paniw, M. 2019. Perspectives from animal demography on incorporating evolutionary mechanism into plant population dynamics. Ecosistemas 28(1):60-68. Doi.: 10.7818/ECOS.1640


With a growing number of long-term, individual-based data on natural populations, it has become increasingly evident that environmental change affects populations through complex, simultaneously occurring demographic and evolutionary processes. Analyses of population-level responses to environmental change must therefore integrate demography and evolution into one coherent framework. Integral projection models (IPMs), which can relate genetic and phenotypic traits to demographic and population-level processes, offer a powerful approach for such integration. However, a rather artificial division exists in how plant and animal population ecologists use IPMs. Here, I argue for the integration of the two sub-disciplines, particularly focusing on how plant ecologists can diversify their toolset to investigate selection pressures and eco-evolutionary dynamics in plant population models. I provide an overview of approaches that have applied IPMs for eco-evolutionary studies and discuss a potential future research agenda for plant population ecologists. Given an impending extinction crisis, a holistic look at the interacting processes mediating population persistence under environmental change is urgently needed.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

How to Cite
Paniw, M. (2019). Perspectives from animal demography on incorporating evolutionary mechanism into plant population dynamics. Ecosistemas, 28(1), 60–68. https://doi.org/10.7818/ECOS.1640
Section
Review articles
Author Biography

Maria Paniw, <p>University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland</p>

Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies