Wiens J David, Noon Barry R, Reynolds Richard T
Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2006 Feb;16(1):406-18. doi: 10.1890/04-1915.
Effective wildlife conservation strategies require an understanding of how fluctuating environmental conditions affect sensitive life stages. As part of a long-term study, we examined post-fledging and post-independence survival of 89 radio-marked juvenile Northern Goshawks (Accipiter gentilis) produced from 48 nests in northern Arizona, USA, during 1998-2001. Information-theoretic methods were used to examine within- and among-year variation in survival relative to environmental (prey abundance, weather), territory (hatching date, brood size), and individual (gender, body mass) sources of variation. The results support age- and cohort-specific differences in survival that were best explained by behaviors occurring at distinct stages of juvenile development, annual changes in the density of primary bird and mammal prey species, and gender-related differences in body mass. Survival between fledging and independence increased linearly with age and varied among annual cohorts of radio-marked juveniles from 0.81 (95% CI = 0.60-0.93) to 1.00 (95% CI = 0.95-1.00) in association with annual differences in prey density; the slope coefficient for the additive effect of prey density on survival was 1.12 (95% CI = 0.06-2.19). Survival declined to 0.71 (95% CI = 0.60-0.93) shortly after juveniles initiated dispersal (weeks 8-12 post-fledging) and moved to more open habitats at lower elevations. Survival was not closely associated with weather or territory-level parameters. A comparison of the predictions of environmental-, territory-, and individual-based models of survival demonstrated that food availability was the primary factor limiting juvenile survival. This finding indicates that forest management prescriptions designed to support abundant prey populations while providing forest structural conditions that allow goshawks to access their prey within breeding areas should benefit juvenile survival.
有效的野生动物保护策略需要了解环境条件的波动如何影响敏感的生命阶段。作为一项长期研究的一部分,我们调查了1998年至2001年期间在美国亚利桑那州北部48个巢穴中出生的89只无线电标记的幼年北方苍鹰(Accipiter gentilis)离巢后和独立后的存活率。采用信息论方法研究了相对于环境(猎物丰度、天气)、领地(孵化日期、窝雏数)和个体(性别、体重)变异来源的年内和年间存活率变化。结果支持了存活率在年龄和群体上的差异,这可以通过幼年发育不同阶段的行为、主要鸟类和哺乳动物猎物物种密度的年度变化以及体重上的性别差异得到最好的解释。离巢到独立之间的存活率随年龄呈线性增加,并且与无线电标记幼年个体的不同年度群体有关,从0.81(95%置信区间=0.60-0.93)到1.00(95%置信区间=0.95-1.00),这与猎物密度的年度差异有关;猎物密度对存活率的加性效应的斜率系数为1.12(95%置信区间=0.06-2.19)。幼鸟开始扩散后不久(离巢后8-12周),当它们迁移到海拔较低、更开阔的栖息地时,存活率下降到0.71(95%置信区间=0.60-0.93)。存活率与天气或领地水平参数没有密切关联。对基于环境、领地和个体的存活率模型预测的比较表明,食物可获得性是限制幼鸟存活率的主要因素。这一发现表明,旨在支持丰富猎物种群的森林管理措施,同时提供使苍鹰能够在繁殖区内获取猎物的森林结构条件,应该会有利于幼鸟的存活。