Laaksonen Toni, Hakkarainen Harri, Korpimäki Erkki
Section of Ecology, Department of Biology, University of Turku, FIN-20014 Turku, Finland.
Proc Biol Sci. 2004 Dec 7;271 Suppl 6(Suppl 6):S461-4. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2004.0221.
Loss and alteration of habitats by human actions are the largest worldwide hazard to biodiversity and viability of populations. In boreal forests of Eurasia and North America the natural habitat is changing, mainly because of forestry practices and agriculture. Although there is evidence that the diversity and abundance of animal species are lower in intensively managed than in natural forests, very little is known about how the changes in habitat composition affect reproduction and survival. The best available measure of individual performance in the wild is lifetime reproductive success (LRS), the number of offspring produced during a lifetime, because it combines both survival and reproductive success to a single measure. We show that the LRS of forest-dwelling Tengmalm's owls (Aegolius funereus) increases with the proportion of old forest in the territory because of a higher number of breeding attempts, whereas it decreases with the proportion of agricultural land because of declining fledging success in years when prey populations crashed during owl breeding. These unique results provide an interesting insight into how human influence on the landscape can affect life-history traits of animals through various pathways.
人类活动导致的栖息地丧失和改变是全球范围内对生物多样性和种群生存能力的最大威胁。在欧亚大陆和北美的北方森林中,自然栖息地正在发生变化,主要原因是林业活动和农业生产。尽管有证据表明,与天然林相比,集约经营的森林中动物物种的多样性和丰富度较低,但对于栖息地组成的变化如何影响繁殖和生存,人们知之甚少。衡量野生动物个体表现的最佳指标是终生繁殖成功率(LRS),即一生中产生的后代数量,因为它将生存和繁殖成功综合为一个单一指标。我们发现,由于繁殖尝试次数较多,领地内老龄森林比例较高的情况下,栖息于森林中的长耳鸮(Aegolius funereus)的终生繁殖成功率会增加;而在猫头鹰繁殖期间猎物种群数量暴跌的年份,由于雏鸟成活率下降,终生繁殖成功率会随着农业用地比例的增加而降低。这些独特的结果为人类对景观的影响如何通过各种途径影响动物的生活史特征提供了有趣的见解。