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人类活动帮助猎物在捕食者-猎物的空间竞赛中获胜。

Human activity helps prey win the predator-prey space race.

机构信息

Faculty of Environmental Design, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2011 Mar 2;6(3):e17050. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0017050.

Abstract

Predator-prey interactions, including between large mammalian wildlife species, can be represented as a "space race", where prey try to minimize and predators maximize spatial overlap. Human activity can also influence the distribution of wildlife species. In particular, high-human disturbance can displace large carnivore predators, a trait-mediated direct effect. Predator displacement by humans could then indirectly benefit prey species by reducing predation risk, a trait-mediated indirect effect of humans that spatially decouples predators from prey. The purpose of this research was to test the hypothesis that high-human activity was displacing predators and thus indirectly creating spatial refuge for prey species, helping prey win the "space race". We measured the occurrence of eleven large mammal species (including humans and cattle) at 43 camera traps deployed on roads and trails in southwest Alberta, Canada. We tested species co-occurrence at camera sites using hierarchical cluster and nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMS) analyses; and tested whether human activity, food and/or habitat influenced predator and prey species counts at camera sites using regression tree analysis. Cluster and NMS analysis indicated that at camera sites humans co-occurred with prey species more than predator species and predator species had relatively low co-occurrence with prey species. Regression tree analysis indicated that prey species were three times more abundant on roads and trails with >32 humans/day. However, predators were less abundant on roads and trails that exceeded 18 humans/day. Our results support the hypothesis that high-human activity displaced predators but not prey species, creating spatial refuge from predation. High-human activity on roads and trails (i.e., >18 humans/day) has the potential to interfere with predator-prey interactions via trait-mediated direct and indirect effects. We urge scientist and managers to carefully consider and quantify the trait-mediated indirect effects of humans, in addition to direct effects, when assessing human impacts on wildlife and ecosystems.

摘要

捕食者-猎物相互作用,包括大型哺乳动物野生动物物种之间的相互作用,可以被表示为一场“空间竞赛”,在这场竞赛中,猎物试图最小化,而捕食者则最大限度地扩大空间重叠。人类活动也会影响野生动物物种的分布。特别是,高强度的人为干扰会迫使大型食肉动物捕食者转移,这是一种特质介导的直接效应。人类引起的捕食者转移可能会通过降低捕食风险间接使猎物受益,这是人类对猎物的特质介导的间接影响,使捕食者和猎物在空间上脱钩。本研究的目的是检验高强度人为活动是否会迫使捕食者转移,从而为猎物物种创造间接的空间避难所,帮助猎物赢得“空间竞赛”这一假说。我们在加拿大艾伯塔省西南部的 43 个道路和小径上的相机陷阱中测量了 11 种大型哺乳动物物种(包括人类和牛)的出现情况。我们使用层次聚类和非度量多维尺度分析(NMS)分析在相机位点上测试物种共现;并使用回归树分析测试了人类活动、食物和/或栖息地是否影响了相机位点上的捕食者和猎物物种的数量。聚类和 NMS 分析表明,在相机位点上,人类与猎物物种的共同出现频率高于捕食者物种,而捕食者物种与猎物物种的共同出现频率相对较低。回归树分析表明,在每天有超过 32 人的道路和小径上,猎物物种的数量增加了三倍。然而,当每天有超过 18 人在道路和小径上时,捕食者的数量会减少。我们的研究结果支持了以下假说:高强度的人为活动迫使捕食者而非猎物物种转移,从而为它们提供了免受捕食的空间避难所。道路和小径上的高强度人为活动(即每天超过 18 人)有可能通过特质介导的直接和间接效应干扰捕食者-猎物相互作用。我们敦促科学家和管理者在评估人类对野生动物和生态系统的影响时,不仅要考虑直接效应,还要仔细考虑和量化人类特质介导的间接效应。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/02fe/3047538/49521340c717/pone.0017050.g001.jpg

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