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Intro
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A field of science comes of age when it is able to predict
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Life history traits: key events in the life of an organism
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Life history traits underpin what's possible
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Life history trait trade-offs determine what's not possible
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Life history theory is taxonomically handicapped
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What determines the repertoire of life history strategies?
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Predictive power of the framework
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Mammal demographic responses to climate drivers are complex
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Tropical life history trait diversity is greater
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Forecast of life history strategies in temporally autocorrelated environments
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Life history traits predict responses to extreme climatic events
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A framework to classify life history strategies...
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Using insights from life history theory to forecast global population responses to climate change
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A third axis: reproductive senescence
Description:
Explore a comprehensive lecture on utilizing life history theory to predict global population responses to climate change. Delve into the maturation of scientific fields, the significance of life history traits, and their role in determining organism capabilities and limitations. Examine the taxonomic limitations of life history theory and investigate the factors shaping life history strategies. Analyze the predictive power of this framework, focusing on complex mammalian demographic responses to climate drivers and the greater diversity of life history traits in tropical regions. Investigate forecasts of life history strategies in temporally autocorrelated environments and learn how these traits predict responses to extreme climatic events. Discover a framework for classifying life history strategies and understand the concept of reproductive senescence as a third axis in this analysis.

Using Insights From Life History Theory to Forecast Global Population Responses to Climate Change

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