Isvaran Kavita
Department of Zoology, University of Florida, 223 Bartram Hall, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.
Oecologia. 2007 Nov;154(2):435-44. doi: 10.1007/s00442-007-0840-x. Epub 2007 Sep 5.
The main ecological factors that are hypothesized to explain the striking variation in the size of social groups among large herbivores are habitat structure, predation, and forage abundance and distribution; however, their relative roles in wild populations are not well understood. I combined analyses of ecological correlates of spatial variation in group size with analyses of individual behaviour in groups of different sizes to investigate factors maintaining variation in group size in an Indian antelope, the blackbuck Antilope cervicapra. I measured group size, habitat structure, forage, and the occurrence of predators in ten blackbuck populations, and, at a smaller spatial scale, within an intensively studied population. To examine the processes by which these ecological factors influence group size, I used behavioural observations and an experiment to estimate the shape of the relationship between group size and potential costs and benefits to individuals. Group size varied extensively both among and within populations. Analyses of spatial variation in group size suggested that both forage and habitat structure influence group size: large-scale, among-population variation in group size was primarily related to habitat structure, while small-scale, within-population variation was most closely related to forage abundance. Analyses of individual behaviour suggested that larger groups incur greater travel costs while foraging. However, individuals in larger groups appeared to experience greater benefits, namely the earlier detection of a "predator", a reduction in vigilance, and an increase in the time spent feeding. Overall, these findings suggest that individuals in groups experience a trade-off between predation-related benefits and costs arising from feeding competition. Habitat structure and forage likely influence the nature of this trade-off; thus, variation in these ecological factors may maintain variation in group size. The role of predation pressure and other factors in explaining the remaining variation needs further exploration.
据推测,能够解释大型食草动物社会群体规模显著差异的主要生态因素包括栖息地结构、捕食行为以及草料的丰富程度和分布情况;然而,它们在野生种群中的相对作用尚未得到充分了解。我将群体规模空间变异的生态相关性分析与不同规模群体中个体行为的分析相结合,以研究维持印度羚羊——印度黑羚(Antilope cervicapra)群体规模变异的因素。我测量了10个印度黑羚种群的群体规模、栖息地结构、草料以及捕食者的出现情况,并在较小的空间尺度上,对一个进行了深入研究的种群进行了测量。为了研究这些生态因素影响群体规模的过程,我利用行为观察和一项实验来估计群体规模与个体潜在成本和收益之间关系的形式。群体规模在种群之间和种群内部都有很大差异。群体规模空间变异分析表明,草料和栖息地结构都影响群体规模:群体规模在大规模的种群间变异主要与栖息地结构有关,而在小规模的种群内变异则与草料丰富程度关系最为密切。个体行为分析表明,较大的群体在觅食时会产生更高的移动成本。然而,较大群体中的个体似乎获得了更大的益处,即能更早发现“捕食者”、降低警惕性以及增加进食时间。总体而言,这些发现表明,群体中的个体在与捕食相关的益处和因觅食竞争产生的成本之间进行权衡。栖息地结构和草料可能会影响这种权衡的性质;因此,这些生态因素的变异可能维持了群体规模的变异。捕食压力和其他因素在解释剩余变异方面的作用需要进一步探索。