Porter W P, Ostrowski S, Williams J B
Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2010 Sep-Oct;83(5):705-12. doi: 10.1086/656181.
There is an increasing need to assess the effects of climate and land-use change on habitat quality, ideally from a mechanistic basis. The symposium "Molecules to Migration: Pressures of Life" at the Fourth International Conference in Africa for Comparative Physiology and Biochemistry, Maasai Mara National Reserve, Kenya, 2008, illustrated how the principles of biophysical ecology can capture the mechanistic links between organisms, climate, and other habitat features. These principles provide spatially explicit assessments of habitat quality from a physiological perspective (i.e., "animal landscapes") that can be validated independently of the data used to derive and parameterize them. The contents of this symposium showcased how the modeling of animal landscapes can be used to assess key issues in applied and theoretical ecology. The presentations included applications to amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. The rare Arabian oryx on the Arabian Peninsula is used as an example for energetic calculations and their implications for behavior on the landscape.
越来越有必要从机制层面评估气候和土地利用变化对栖息地质量的影响。2008年在肯尼亚马赛马拉国家保护区举行的第四届非洲比较生理学和生物化学国际会议上的“从分子到迁徙:生命的压力”研讨会,展示了生物物理生态学原理如何捕捉生物体、气候和其他栖息地特征之间的机制联系。这些原理从生理学角度(即“动物景观”)提供了对栖息地质量的空间明确评估,这种评估可以独立于用于推导和参数化它们的数据进行验证。本次研讨会的内容展示了动物景观建模如何用于评估应用生态学和理论生态学中的关键问题。报告内容包括在两栖动物、爬行动物、鸟类和哺乳动物方面的应用。阿拉伯半岛稀有的阿拉伯羚羊被用作能量计算及其对景观行为影响的示例。