Brunton Benjamin J, Booth David J
Dept. of Environmental Sciences, University of Technology Sydney, Westbourne Street, NSW 2065, Gore Hill, Australia.
Oecologia. 2003 Nov;137(3):377-84. doi: 10.1007/s00442-003-1377-2. Epub 2003 Sep 12.
Density-dependent mortality may regulate many populations, but due to an offshore larval phase in benthic marine organisms, it is often difficult to quantify the effects of mortality of arriving individuals. We added approximately 600 recruit-sized individuals onto coral reef that parallels patterns in naturally settling fish. Strong, positive density-dependent mortality occurred 3 days, 1-2 weeks, and 4 months after release. Since our study species was patchily distributed, we estimated both mean group size and overall density in a transect. Mortality was more strongly related to mean group size than overall density in a transect, indicating that recruit patchiness was important. Cohesive groups may suffer higher mortality than those spread over larger areas, even if overall density of the latter is greater. Aggregative responses of predators may occur in response to larger groups, so may have contributed to positive density-dependent mortality. Increased conspicuousness to predators and congeneric aggression are additional factors that may vary positively with group size. Tagging of recruits showed migration within but not between transects, so persistence was tantamount to survival. Standard otolith back-calculation techniques employed to reconstruct original size of tagged recruits that persisted 4 months after additions indicated that mortality was also size-dependent. Size-dependent mortality was apparent at the site with the highest mortality but not at the site with the lowest mortality, resulting in different mean body sizes of recruits between sites. Size-dependent mortality may influence estimation of growth and lead to onset of size-based maturity in these fish. Strong, positive density-dependent mortality may regulate recruitment, and if coupled with size-dependent mortality, may increase maturity rate, adding to reproductive schedules of those that survive.
密度依赖型死亡率可能会调节许多种群,但由于底栖海洋生物存在近海幼体阶段,往往难以量化到达个体的死亡率影响。我们在与自然定居鱼类模式相似的珊瑚礁上添加了约600个幼体大小的个体。放流后3天、1 - 2周和4个月出现了强烈的、正密度依赖型死亡率。由于我们的研究物种分布不均,我们在样带中估计了平均群体大小和总体密度。在样带中,死亡率与平均群体大小的关系比与总体密度的关系更强,这表明幼体的斑块分布很重要。即使后者的总体密度更大,紧密的群体可能比分布在更大区域的群体死亡率更高。捕食者的聚集反应可能会因较大的群体而发生,因此可能导致了正密度依赖型死亡率。对捕食者的显眼性增加和同类攻击是可能随群体大小呈正相关变化的额外因素。对幼体的标记显示它们在样带内迁移但不在样带间迁移,所以持久性等同于存活。用于重建添加后存活4个月的标记幼体原始大小的标准耳石反推技术表明,死亡率也是大小依赖型的。在死亡率最高的地点,大小依赖型死亡率明显,但在死亡率最低的地点则不明显,导致不同地点的幼体平均体型不同。大小依赖型死亡率可能会影响生长估计,并导致这些鱼类基于大小的成熟开始。强烈的、正密度依赖型死亡率可能会调节补充量,如果再加上大小依赖型死亡率,可能会提高成熟率,增加存活个体的繁殖时间表。