Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Zoology Building, 25 Harbord Street, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 3G5.
J Theor Biol. 2009 Nov 21;261(2):294-304. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2009.07.026. Epub 2009 Jul 28.
Simple models are used to explore how adaptive changes in prey vulnerability alter the population response of their predator to increased mortality. If the mortality is an imposed harvest, the change in prey vulnerability also influences the relationship between harvest effort and yield of the predator. The models assume that different prey phenotypes share a single resource, but have different vulnerabilities to the predator. Decreased vulnerability is assumed to decrease resource consumption rate. Adaptive change may occur by phenotypic changes in the traits of a single species or by shifts in the abundances of a pair of coexisting species or morphs. The response of the predator population is influenced by the shape of the predator's functional response, the shape of resource density dependence, and the shape of the tradeoff between vulnerability and food intake in the prey. Given a linear predator functional response, adaptive prey defense tends to produce a decelerating decline in predator population size with increased mortality. Prey defense may also greatly increase the range of mortality rates that allow predator persistence. If the predator has a type-2 response with a significant handling time, adaptive prey defense may have a greater variety of effects on the predator's response to mortality, sometimes producing alternative attractors, population cycles, or increased mean predator density. Situations in which there is disruptive selection on prey defense often imply a bimodal change in yield as a function of harvesting effort, with a minimum at intermediate effort. These results argue against using single-species models of density dependent growth to manage predatory species, and illustrate the importance of incorporating anti-predator behavior into models in applied population ecology.
简单模型被用于探索猎物易损性的适应性变化如何改变其捕食者对增加死亡率的种群响应。如果死亡率是一种强制的收获,那么猎物易损性的变化也会影响捕食者的收获努力和产量之间的关系。这些模型假设不同的猎物表型共享单一资源,但对捕食者的易损性不同。易损性降低被假设为降低资源消耗率。适应性变化可能通过单一物种的表型变化或两种共存物种或形态的丰度变化发生。捕食者种群的响应受到捕食者功能响应的形状、资源密度依赖的形状以及猎物易损性和食物摄入之间权衡的形状的影响。在给定线性捕食者功能响应的情况下,适应性猎物防御往往会导致随着死亡率的增加,捕食者种群大小呈减速下降。猎物防御也可能大大增加允许捕食者生存的死亡率范围。如果捕食者具有具有显著处理时间的 2 型响应,则适应性猎物防御可能会对捕食者对死亡率的响应产生更多种影响,有时会产生替代吸引子、种群循环或增加的平均捕食者密度。在猎物防御上存在干扰选择的情况下,通常意味着作为收获努力的函数,产量会呈双峰变化,中间努力时产量最低。这些结果反对使用基于密度依赖增长的单一物种模型来管理捕食性物种,并说明了将抗捕食行为纳入应用种群生态学模型的重要性。