Biology Department, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania 16335, USA.
Ecology. 2010 Feb;91(2):549-59. doi: 10.1890/08-1366.1.
Theory and empirical studies suggest that cannibalism in age-structured populations can regulate recruitment depending on the intensity of intraspecific competition between cannibals and victims and the nature of the cannibalism window, i.e., which size classes interact as cannibals and victims. Here we report on a series of experiments that quantify that window for age-structured populations of salamander larvae and paedomorphic adults. We determined body size limits on cannibalism in microcosms and then the consumptive and nonconsumptive (injuries, foraging and activity, diet, growth) effects on victims in mesocosms with seminatural levels of habitat complexity and alternative prey. We found that cannibalism by the largest size classes (paedomorphs and > or = age 3+ yr larvae) occurs mainly on young-of-the-year (YOY) victims. Surviving YOY and other small larvae had increased injuries, reduced activity levels, and reduced growth rates in the presence of cannibals. Data on YOY survival in an experiment in which we manipulated the density of paedomorphs combined with historical data on the number of cannibals in natural populations indicate that dominant cohorts of paedomorphs can cause observed recruitment failures. Dietary data indicate that ontogenetic shifts in diet should preclude strong intraspecific competition between YOY and cannibals in this species. Thus our results are consistent with previous empirical and theoretical work that suggests that recruitment regulation by cannibalism is most likely when YOY are vulnerable to cannibalism but have low dietary overlap with cannibals. Understanding the role of cannibalism in regulating recruitment in salamander populations is timely, given the widespread occurrences of amphibian decline. Previous studies have focused on extrinsic (including anthropogenic) factors that affect amphibian population dynamics, whereas the data presented here combined with long-term field observations suggest the potential for intrinsically driven population cycles.
理论和实证研究表明,在年龄结构种群中,同类相食可以根据捕食者和猎物之间的种内竞争强度以及同类相食窗口的性质(即哪些体型类群作为捕食者和猎物相互作用)来调节补充量。在这里,我们报告了一系列实验的结果,这些实验量化了有尾两栖类幼虫和幼态成熟成体的年龄结构种群的这个窗口。我们在微生境中确定了同类相食的体型限制,然后在具有半自然水平生境复杂性和替代猎物的中生境中,通过实验测试了对受害者的消耗和非消耗(伤害、觅食和活动、饮食、生长)效应。我们发现,最大体型类群(幼态成熟个体和成体 3 龄以上个体)的同类相食主要发生在当年出生的幼体(YOY)身上。在捕食者存在的情况下,幸存的 YOY 和其他小幼虫的受伤程度增加,活动水平降低,生长速度减慢。在一项实验中,我们操纵幼态成熟个体的密度,同时结合自然种群中幼态成熟个体数量的历史数据,发现优势幼态成熟个体群体可能导致观察到的补充失败。饮食数据表明,在该物种中,饮食的个体发育变化应该排除 YOY 与捕食者之间强烈的种内竞争。因此,我们的结果与以前的经验和理论工作一致,即当 YOY 容易受到捕食者的捕食但与捕食者的饮食重叠度较低时,同类相食最有可能调节补充量。考虑到两栖类动物的广泛衰退,了解同类相食在调节有尾两栖类种群补充量中的作用是及时的。以前的研究主要集中在影响两栖类种群动态的外部(包括人为)因素上,而这里提出的数据结合长期的野外观察结果表明,种群可能存在内在驱动的周期性。