Rodewald Amanda D, Shustack Daniel P
School of Environment and Natural Resources, Ohio State University,Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA.
Ecology. 2008 Feb;89(2):515-21. doi: 10.1890/07-0358.1.
Population responses of synanthropic species to urbanization may be explained by the resource-matching rule, which postulates that individuals should distribute themselves according to resource availability. According to the resource-matching rule, urban habitats will contain greater densities if they provide better resources than rural habitats. However, because resource availability is density dependent, individuals in urban areas would ultimately achieve fitness levels comparable to, but no better than, individuals in less urban areas. Some ecologists suggest that synanthropic birds may not conform to the resource-matching rule and may instead overmatch (i.e., overexploit) in urban habitats, ultimately leading to lower fitness despite greater resource levels. Using the Northern Cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) as a focal species, we evaluated if Cardinal populations in urban and rural habitats were consistent with predictions of consumer resource matching. During 2003-2006 we documented population density, adult body condition, apparent survival, and annual reproductive productivity of Cardinals in riparian forest stands within urban (n = 8 stands) and rural (n = 6 stands) landscapes in Ohio, USA. Density of Cardinals in urban forests was four times that found in more rural forests. Mark-resight data from 147 males and 125 females over four years indicated that apparent survival rates were similar between urban and rural landscapes (phi = 0.64, SE = 0.039 for males and phi = 0.57, SE = 0.04 for females). Similarly, body condition indices of 168 males, 142 females, and 118 nestlings did not differ significantly between landscapes. Annual reproductive productivity (mean number of fledglings per pair over breeding season) of 294 pairs was comparable for urban (2.4 +/- 0.18 [mean +/- SE] and rural (2.1 +/- 0.18) young birds. Thus, contrary to recent suggestions, we find that high densities of certain synanthropic species in urban landscapes are consistent with expectations of consumer resource matching.
伴人物种对城市化的种群响应可能由资源匹配规则来解释,该规则假定个体应根据资源可用性来分布自身。根据资源匹配规则,如果城市栖息地比农村栖息地提供更好的资源,那么城市栖息地将包含更高的密度。然而,由于资源可用性是密度依赖的,城市地区的个体最终将达到与城市化程度较低地区的个体相当但并不更好的适合度水平。一些生态学家认为,伴人物种鸟类可能不符合资源匹配规则,而是可能在城市栖息地中过度匹配(即过度利用),尽管资源水平更高,但最终导致适合度降低。以北美主红雀(Cardinalis cardinalis)为重点研究物种,我们评估了城市和农村栖息地中的主红雀种群是否符合消费者资源匹配的预测。在2003年至2006年期间,我们记录了美国俄亥俄州城市(n = 8个林分)和农村(n = 6个林分)景观中河岸林分内主红雀的种群密度、成年个体身体状况、表观存活率和年繁殖生产力。城市森林中主红雀的密度是农村森林中的四倍。对147只雄性和125只雌性主红雀进行了四年的标记重捕数据表明,城市和农村景观中的表观存活率相似(雄性:φ = 0.64,SE = 0.039;雌性:φ = 0.57,SE = 0.04)。同样,168只雄性、142只雌性和118只雏鸟的身体状况指数在不同景观之间没有显著差异。294对主红雀的年繁殖生产力(繁殖季节每对雏鸟的平均数量)在城市(2.4 ± 0.18 [平均值 ± 标准误])和农村(2.1 ± 0.18)幼鸟中相当。因此,与最近的观点相反,我们发现城市景观中某些伴人物种的高密度与消费者资源匹配的预期一致。