Mac Nally Ralph
Australian Centre for Biodiversity: Analysis, Policy and Management, School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Victoria 3800, Australia.
Am Nat. 2007 Sep;170(3):319-30. doi: 10.1086/519859. Epub 2007 Jul 19.
Fragmentation of natural landscapes is a pervasive process in the world. Common models predict coherent change in assemblages, with less numerous species becoming locally extinct first, then species of intermediate abundance, and so forth. Relative-abundance distributions should change systematically in landscapes characterized by greater change. Such a predictable sequence of change is not evident in the avifaunas of landscapes of central Victoria, Australia, where relative-abundance patterns in more affected landscapes bear little resemblance to reference distributions. I provide two sets of analyses of relative-abundance distributions: (1) analyses that do not depend on the identity of individual species and (2) abundance spectra, which use ordered lists of species ranked by species' commonness in reference systems. While abundance spectra change dramatically in smaller remnants, relative-abundance distributions change little, suggesting that the "reorganization" of abundances occurs over ecological time frames. The dispersal-limited multinomial is a flexible distribution that may fit many data sets yet be unrelated to assumptions (species neutrality) and processes (fixed total numbers of individuals) of the unified neutral theory. A more complete understanding of human impacts at landscape scales must include capacities to predict those species that will be advantaged by change, as well as those that will be disadvantaged.
自然景观破碎化是全球普遍存在的一个过程。常见模型预测群落会发生连贯变化,数量较少的物种首先在当地灭绝,然后是中等数量的物种,依此类推。在变化较大的景观中,相对丰度分布应该会系统性地改变。在澳大利亚维多利亚州中部景观的鸟类群落中,这种可预测的变化序列并不明显,在受影响更大的景观中,相对丰度模式与参考分布几乎没有相似之处。我提供了两组关于相对丰度分布的分析:(1)不依赖于单个物种身份的分析,以及(2)丰度谱,它使用在参考系统中按物种常见程度排序的物种有序列表。虽然丰度谱在较小的残余区域中变化显著,但相对丰度分布变化不大,这表明丰度的“重组”发生在生态时间尺度上。扩散受限多项分布是一种灵活的分布,可能适用于许多数据集,但与统一中性理论的假设(物种中性)和过程(个体总数固定)无关。要更全面地理解景观尺度上的人类影响,必须具备预测哪些物种将因变化而受益以及哪些物种将处于不利地位的能力。