Foley Charles, Pettorelli Nathalie, Foley Lara
Wildlife Conservation Society, International Conservation, 2300 Southern Boulevard, New York, NY 10460-1099, USA.
Biol Lett. 2008 Oct 23;4(5):541-4. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2008.0370.
Climate change in Africa is expected to lead to a higher occurrence of severe droughts in semi-arid and arid ecosystems. Understanding how animal populations react to such events is thus crucial for addressing future challenges for wildlife management and conservation. We explored how gender, age, mother's experience and family group characteristics determined calf survival in an elephant population during a severe drought in Tanzania in 1993. Young males were particularly sensitive to the drought and calf loss was higher among young mothers than among more experienced mothers. We also report high variability in calf mortality between different family groups, with family groups that remained in the National Park suffering heavy calf loss, compared with the ones that left the Park. This study highlights how severe droughts can dramatically affect early survival of large herbivores and suggests that extreme climatic events might act as a selection force on vertebrate populations, allowing only individuals with the appropriate behaviour and/or knowledge to survive.
预计非洲的气候变化将导致半干旱和干旱生态系统中严重干旱的发生频率更高。因此,了解动物种群如何应对此类事件对于应对野生动物管理和保护方面的未来挑战至关重要。我们探究了性别、年龄、母亲的经验和家族群体特征如何决定1993年坦桑尼亚严重干旱期间大象种群中幼象的存活情况。年轻雄性对干旱特别敏感,年轻母亲的幼象损失率高于经验更丰富的母亲。我们还报告了不同家族群体之间幼象死亡率的高度差异,与离开公园的家族群体相比,留在国家公园的家族群体幼象损失惨重。这项研究凸显了严重干旱如何能极大地影响大型食草动物的早期存活,并表明极端气候事件可能对脊椎动物种群起到选择作用,只有具备适当行为和/或知识的个体才能存活。