Morris D W, Lundberg P, Ripa J
Department of Biology, and Faculty of Forestry and the Forest Environment, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada.
Proc Biol Sci. 2001 May 7;268(1470):921-4. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2001.1597.
If individuals occupy habitats in a way that maximizes their fitness, if they are free to occupy the habitats they choose and if fitness declines with population density, then their abundance across habitats should follow an ideal free distribution. But, if individuals are genetically related, this simple fitness-maximization mechanism breaks down. Habitat occupation should obey Hamilton's rule (natural selection favours traits causing a loss in individual fitness as long as they result in an equal or greater gain in inclusive fitness) and depends more on inclusive fitness than it does on individual fitness. We demonstrate that the resulting inclusive-fitness distribution inflates the population density in habitats of poorer inherent quality, creating pronounced source sink dynamics. We also show that density-dependent habitat selection among relatives reinforces behaviours such as group defence and interspecific territoriality, and that it explains many anomalies in dispersal and foraging.
如果个体以使其适应性最大化的方式占据栖息地,如果它们可以自由选择所占据的栖息地,并且如果适应性随种群密度下降,那么它们在不同栖息地的丰度应遵循理想自由分布。但是,如果个体存在亲缘关系,这种简单的适应性最大化机制就会失效。栖息地占据应遵循汉密尔顿法则(只要导致个体适应性损失的性状能带来同等或更大的广义适应性增益,自然选择就会青睐这些性状),并且更多地取决于广义适应性而非个体适应性。我们证明,由此产生的广义适应性分布会使固有质量较差的栖息地中的种群密度增加,从而形成明显的源 - 汇动态。我们还表明,亲属之间依赖密度的栖息地选择会强化诸如群体防御和种间领地行为等行为,并且它解释了许多扩散和觅食方面的异常现象。