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繁殖率和体型预测道路对哺乳动物丰度的影响。

Reproductive rate and body size predict road impacts on mammal abundance.

机构信息

Geomatics and Landscape Ecology Laboratory (GLEL), Ottawa-Carleton Institute of Biology, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6 Canada.

出版信息

Ecol Appl. 2011 Mar;21(2):589-600. doi: 10.1890/10-0968.1.

Abstract

It has been hypothesized that mobile species should be more negatively affected by road mortality than less-mobile species because they interact with roads more often, and that species with lower reproductive rates and longer generation times should be more susceptible to road effects because they will be less able to rebound quickly from population declines. Taken together, these hypotheses suggest that, in general, larger species should be more affected by road networks than smaller species because larger species generally have lower reproductive rates and longer generation times and are more mobile than smaller species. We tested these hypotheses by estimating relative abundances of 17 mammal species across landscapes ranging in road density within eastern Ontario, Canada. For each of the 13 species for which detectability was not related to road density, we quantified the relationship between road density and relative abundance. We then tested three cross-species predictions: that the slope of the relationship between road density and abundance should become increasingly negative with (1) decreasing annual reproductive rate; (2) increasing home range area (an indicator of movement range); and (3) increasing body size. All three predictions were supported in univariate models, with R2 values of 0.68, 0.50, and 0.52 respectively. The best overall model based on AICc contained both reproductive rate (P = 0.008) and body size (P = 0.072) and explained 77% of the variation in the slope of the relationship between road density and abundance. Our results suggest that priority should be placed on mitigating road effects on large mammals with low reproductive rates.

摘要

有人假设,与较不移动的物种相比,移动物种应该更容易受到道路死亡率的负面影响,因为它们更频繁地与道路互动,而繁殖率较低且世代时间较长的物种更容易受到道路影响,因为它们从种群减少中迅速恢复的能力较差。总的来说,这些假设表明,一般来说,较大的物种比较小的物种更容易受到道路网络的影响,因为较大的物种通常繁殖率较低,世代时间较长,比较小的物种更具移动性。我们通过在加拿大安大略省东部的景观范围内估计 17 种哺乳动物物种的相对丰度来测试这些假设,这些景观的道路密度不同。对于 13 种物种中的每一种,其可检测性与道路密度无关,我们量化了道路密度与相对丰度之间的关系。然后,我们测试了三个跨物种的预测:随着(1)每年繁殖率降低;(2)活动范围面积增加(移动范围的指标);(3)体型增加,道路密度与丰度之间的关系斜率应变得越来越负。在单变量模型中,这三个预测都得到了支持,R2 值分别为 0.68、0.50 和 0.52。基于 AICc 的最佳总体模型包含繁殖率(P=0.008)和体型(P=0.072),并解释了道路密度与丰度之间关系斜率变化的 77%。我们的结果表明,应优先考虑减轻繁殖率较低的大型哺乳动物的道路影响。

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