Abstract Natural populations may suffer negatively from increased environmental variability due to climate change; however, several mechanisms can mitigate those effects by changing the vital rates of a population ( e.g ., survival, reproduction). Despite important analytical and theoretical advances, we still do not know how and to what extent environmental regimes, life history traits, and evolutionary history determine the buffering capacity of natural populations. To address these questions,
Plant population responses to environmental variability are primarily driven by survival-reproduction trade-offs and mediated by aridity
Gabriel Silva Santos·Roberto Salguero-Gómez·Samuel J. L. Gascoigne·Aldo Compagnoni·André T. C. Dias·Shripad Tuljapurkar·Maja Kajin·Xianyu Yang
