Yang Louie H, Bastow Justin L, Spence Kenneth O, Wright Amber N
Section of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, California 95616, USA.
Ecology. 2008 Mar;89(3):621-34. doi: 10.1890/07-0175.1.
An increasing number of studies in a wide range of natural systems have investigated how pulses of resource availability influence ecological processes at individual, population, and community levels. Taken together, these studies suggest that some common processes may underlie pulsed resource dynamics in a wide diversity of systems. Developing a common framework of terms and concepts for the study of resource pulses may facilitate greater synthesis among these apparently disparate systems. Here, we propose a general definition of the resource pulse concept, outline some common patterns in the causes and consequences of resource pulses, and suggest a few key questions for future investigations. We define resource pulses as episodes of increased resource availability in space and time that combine low frequency (rarity), large magnitude (intensity), and short duration (brevity), and emphasize the importance of considering resource pulses at spatial and temporal scales relevant to specific resource-onsumer interactions. Although resource pulses are uncommon events for consumers in specific systems, our review of the existing literature suggests that pulsed resource dynamics are actually widespread phenomena in nature. Resource pulses often result from climatic and environmental factors, processes of spatiotemporal accumulation and release, outbreak population dynamics, or a combination of these factors. These events can affect life history traits and behavior at the level of individual consumers, numerical responses at the population level, and indirect effects at the community level. Consumers show strategies for utilizing ephemeral resources opportunistically, reducing resource variability by averaging over larger spatial scales, and tolerating extended interpulse periods of reduced resource availability. Resource pulses can also create persistent effects in communities through several mechanisms. We suggest that the study of resource pulses provides opportunities to understand the dynamics of many specific systems, and may also contribute to broader ecological questions at individual, population, and community levels.
越来越多针对广泛自然系统的研究探讨了资源可利用性脉冲如何在个体、种群和群落水平上影响生态过程。综合来看,这些研究表明一些共同的过程可能是多种系统中脉冲式资源动态的基础。为资源脉冲研究建立一个通用的术语和概念框架,可能有助于在这些看似不同的系统之间进行更大程度的综合。在此,我们提出资源脉冲概念的一般定义,概述资源脉冲的成因和后果中的一些常见模式,并提出一些未来研究的关键问题。我们将资源脉冲定义为在空间和时间上资源可利用性增加的事件,其具有低频(稀有性)、大幅度(强度)和短持续时间(短暂性)的特点,并强调在与特定资源 - 消费者相互作用相关的空间和时间尺度上考虑资源脉冲的重要性。尽管资源脉冲对于特定系统中的消费者来说是不常见的事件,但我们对现有文献的综述表明,脉冲式资源动态实际上是自然界中广泛存在的现象。资源脉冲通常源于气候和环境因素、时空积累和释放过程、种群爆发动态或这些因素的组合。这些事件会影响个体消费者层面的生活史特征和行为、种群层面的数量反应以及群落层面的间接影响。消费者表现出机会性利用短暂资源、通过在更大空间尺度上进行平均来降低资源变异性以及容忍资源可利用性降低的延长脉冲间期的策略。资源脉冲还可通过多种机制在群落中产生持久影响。我们认为,对资源脉冲的研究为理解许多特定系统的动态提供了机会,也可能有助于解决个体、种群和群落层面更广泛的生态学问题。