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Environmental variability directly affects the prevalence of divorce in monogamous albatrosses

Summary/Abstract

In many socially monogamous species, divorce is a strategy used to correct for sub-optimal partnerships and is informed by measures of previous breeding performance. The environment affects the productivity and survival of populations, thus indirectly affecting divorce via changes in demographic rates. However, whether environmental fluctuations directly modulate the prevalence of divorce in a population remains poorly understood. Here, using a longitudinal dataset on the long-lived black-browed albatross (Thalassarche melanophris) as a model organism, we test the hypothesis that environmental variability directly affects divorce. We found that divorce rate varied across years (1% to 8%). Individuals were more likely to divorce after breeding failures. However, regardless of previous breeding performance, the probability of divorce was directly affected by the environment, increasing in years with warm sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA). Furthermore, our state-space models show that warm SSTA increased the probability of switching mates in females in successful relationships. For the first time, to our knowledge, we document the disruptive effects of challenging environmental conditions on the breeding processes of a monogamous population, potentially mediated by higher reproductive costs, changes in phenology and physiological stress. Environmentally driven divorce may therefore represent an overlooked consequence of global change.

Francesco Ventura et al. 2021. Environmental variability directly affects the prevalence of divorce in monogamous albatrosses. Proc. R. Soc. B. 288: 20212112. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2021.2112.

View Resource
November 2021
Francesco Ventura, José Pedro Granadeiro, Paul M. Lukacs, Amanda Kuepfer, and Paulo Catry
Proceedings of the Royal Society B
Peer-reviewed Study
Falkland Islands, South America
Impact Attribution → Species Impacts

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