Ecology of ageing in albatrosses
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Embargo End Date
2100-12-31
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Abstract
Age-related variation in demographic rates has significant consequences for population and
evolutionary dynamics, and understanding the processes driving such variation is therefore an
important aspect of evolutionary ecology. Reproductive performance may vary over the lifetime
of an individual, and this may be the result of both variations in reproductive effort and changes
in individual competency. For example, increasing experience is likely to have beneficial effects
on reproduction during early life, and senescence, or declines in physiological function, may
have negative impacts on the performance of older individuals. The rate at which these changes
occur can vary dramatically between species, and even between individuals of the same species.
However, understanding the causes and consequences of this variation in the rate of ageing is not
always straightforward. As well as the individual-level processes described, the phenotypic
composition of successive age classes will contribute to age-related variation observed at the
population level. Abrupt changes in performance, such as the poor performance of first time
breeders, may be obscured if individuals vary in their age at first reproduction. Population-level
patterns may also be influenced by selection; for example, the selective disappearance of low
quality individuals from older age classes may mask senescent declines in the performance of
longer-lived individuals. Moreover, the physiological mechanisms that underpin within-individual
changes in performance are not well understood. Unravelling the drivers of such age-related
variation requires longitudinal data, following individuals throughout their lives, which
presents challenges for the study of natural populations.
Albatrosses are among the longest lived vertebrates. In this thesis, I use data from three species
of albatross breeding at Bird Island, South Georgia (54°00’S, 38°03’W) to explore age-related
variation. Focusing primarily on the wandering albatross, Diomedea exulans, I characterise the
relationship between age and various reproductive traits, and decompose the population-level
patterns to reveal effects of experience, senescence and terminal effects across the reproductive
lifespan of individuals. I then consider foraging behaviour as a proximate driver of changes in
reproductive performance in this species. Using tracking data collected over a 20 year period, I
find limited evidence for age-related variation in foraging trips taken throughout the breeding
cycle. Going one step further, I explore telomere dynamics in the wandering albatross,
examining the potential for telomere length to act as a physiological marker of individual state.
Finally, I move on to a species comparison, incorporating data from the black-browed
(Thalassarche melanophris) and grey-headed albatross (Thalassarche chrysostoma). I compare
the population- and individual-level ageing patterns of these three closely related species, and
consider these in light of their differing life history strategies.
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