Ims Rolf A, Andreassen Harry P
Department of Biology, University of Tromsø, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway.
Proc Biol Sci. 2005 May 7;272(1566):913-8. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2004.3025.
The synchronization of the dynamics of spatially subdivided populations is of both fundamental and applied interest in population biology. Based on theoretical studies, dispersal movements have been inferred to be one of the most general causes of population synchrony, yet no empirical study has mapped distance-dependent estimates of movement rates on the actual pattern of synchrony in species that are known to exhibit population synchrony. Northern vole and lemming species are particularly well-known for their spatially synchronized population dynamics. Here, we use results from an experimental study to demonstrate that tundra vole dispersal movements did not act to synchronize population dynamics in fragmented habitats. In contrast to the constant dispersal rate assumed in earlier theoretical studies, the tundra vole, and many other species, exhibit negative density-dependent dispersal. Simulations of a simple mathematical model, parametrized on the basis of our experimental data, verify the empirical results, namely that the observed negative density-dependent dispersal did not have a significant synchronizing effect.
空间细分种群动态的同步在种群生物学中具有基础和应用方面的重要意义。基于理论研究,扩散运动被推断为种群同步最普遍的原因之一,但尚无实证研究将运动速率的距离依赖性估计与已知表现出种群同步的物种的实际同步模式相对应。北方田鼠和旅鼠物种因其空间同步的种群动态而尤为著名。在此,我们利用一项实验研究的结果来证明,苔原田鼠的扩散运动并未使破碎栖息地中的种群动态同步。与早期理论研究中假设的恒定扩散速率相反,苔原田鼠以及许多其他物种表现出负密度依赖扩散。基于我们的实验数据进行参数化的一个简单数学模型的模拟验证了实证结果,即观察到的负密度依赖扩散没有显著的同步效应。