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From Insects to Frogs, Egg–Juvenile Recruitment Can Have Persistent Effects on Population Sizes

Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics 2021 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Barbara J. Downes, Barbara J. Downes, Barbara L. Peckarsky, Barbara L. Peckarsky, Jill Lancaster, William D. Bovill, Maria Alp

Summary

This review examines whether the number of eggs laid by animals with complex life cycles (insects, fish, amphibians) predicts adult population sizes. Understanding recruitment patterns matters for predicting how environmental stressors like pollution affect wildlife populations.

Study Type Environmental

Understanding what regulates population sizes of organisms with complex life cycles is challenging because limits on population sizes can occur at any stage or transition. We extend a conceptual framework to explore whether numbers of successfully laid eggs determine densities of later stages in insects, fish, amphibians, and snails inhabiting marine, freshwater, or terrestrial habitats. Our review suggests novel hypotheses, which propose characteristics of species or environments that create spatial variation in egg densities and predict when such patterns are maintained throughout subsequent life-cycle stages. Existing data, although limited, suggest that persistent, strong associations between egg and subsequent juvenile densities are likely for species where suitable egg-laying habitat is in short supply. Those associations are weakened in some environments and for some species by density-dependent losses of eggs or hatchlings. Such cross-ecosystem comparisons are fundamental to generality in ecology but demand place-based understandings of species’ biology and natural history.

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