학술논문

It is time to mate: population-level plasticity of wild boar reproductive timing and synchrony in a changing environment
Original Article
Document Type
Report
Source
Current Zoology. August 2022, Vol. 68 Issue 4, p371, 10 p.
Subject
Italy
Language
English
ISSN
1674-5507
Abstract
Animals face changing environments throughout their whole life cycles. Individuals are adapted to the changes that are regular and predictable. The most common example is seasonality in temperate zones, for [...]
On a population level, individual plasticity in reproductive phenology can provoke either anticipations or delays in the average reproductive timing in response to environmental changes. However, a rigid reliance on photoperiodism can constraint such plastic responses in populations inhabiting temperate latitudes. The regulation of breeding season length may represent a further tool for populations facing changing environments. Nonetheless, this skill was reported only for equatorial, nonphotoperiodic populations. Our goal was to evaluate whether species living in temperate regions and relying on photoperiodism to trigger their reproduction may also be able to regulate breeding season length. During 10 years, we collected 2,500 female reproductive traits of a mammal model species (wild boar Sus scrofa) and applied a novel analytical approach to reproductive patterns in order to observe population-level variations of reproductive timing and synchrony under different weather and resources availability conditions. Under favorable conditions, breeding seasons were anticipated and population synchrony increased (i.e., shorter breeding seasons). Conversely, poor conditions induced delayed and less synchronous (i.e., longer) breeding seasons. The potential to regulate breeding season length depending on environmental conditions may entail a high resilience of the population reproductive patterns against environmental changes, as highlighted by the fact that almost all mature females were reproductive every year. Keywords: breeding season length, phenology, photoperiodism, population ecology, reproduction, wild boar