Department of Animal Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), P.O. Box 50, 6700 AB Wageningen, The Netherlands.
J Anim Ecol. 2012 May;81(3):657-66. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2011.01948.x. Epub 2012 Jan 24.
1. Habitat use can influence individual performance in a wide range of animals, either immediately or through carry-over effects in subsequent seasons. Given that many animal species also show consistent individual differences in reproductive success, it seems plausible that individuals may have consistent patterns of habitat use representing individual specializations, with concomitant fitness consequences. 2. Stable-carbon isotope ratios from a range of tissues were used to discern individual consistency in habitat use along a terrestrial-aquatic gradient in a long-distance migrant, the Bewick's swan (Cygnus columbianus bewickii). These individual specialisations represented <15% of the isotopic breadth of the population for the majority of individuals and were seen to persist throughout autumn migration and overwintering until aquatic habitats were no longer available. 3. Individual foraging specialisations were then used to demonstrate two consecutive carry-over effects associated with macroscale habitat segregation: consequences of breeding season processes for autumn habitat use; and consequences of autumn habitat use for future reproductive success. Adults that were successful breeders in the year of capture used terrestrial habitats significantly more than adults that were not successful, revealing a substantial cost of reproduction and extended parental care. Use of aquatic habitats during autumn was, however, associated with increased body condition prior to spring migration; and increased subsequent breeding success in adults that had been unsuccessful the year before. Yet adults that were successful breeders in the year of capture remained the most likely to be successful the following year, despite their use of terrestrial habitats. 4. Our results uniquely demonstrate not only individual foraging specializations throughout the migration period, but also that processes during breeding and autumn migration, mediated by individual consistency, may play a fundamental role in the population dynamics of long-distance migrants. These findings, therefore, highlight the importance of long-term consistency to our understanding of habitat function, interindividual differences in fitness, population dynamics and the evolution of migratory strategies.
生境利用可以直接或通过后续季节的传递效应影响广泛的动物个体表现。鉴于许多动物物种在繁殖成功率上也表现出一致的个体差异,似乎可以合理地假设,个体可能具有一致的生境利用模式,代表个体的专业化,同时伴随着适应度的后果。
在远距离迁徙的 Bewick's Swan(Cygnus columbianus bewickii)中,我们使用一系列组织的稳定碳同位素比值来辨别个体在陆地-水生梯度上生境利用的一致性。这些个体特化仅占大多数个体同位素广度的<15%,并且在整个秋季迁徙和越冬期间一直存在,直到不再有可用的水生栖息地。
然后,个体觅食特化被用来证明与宏观生境隔离相关的两个连续的传递效应:繁殖季节过程对秋季生境利用的影响;以及秋季生境利用对未来繁殖成功的影响。在当年繁殖成功的成年个体比繁殖不成功的成年个体更多地使用陆地生境,这揭示了繁殖的巨大成本和延长的亲代抚育。然而,在秋季使用水生栖息地与春季迁徙前的身体状况增加有关;并且在前一年繁殖不成功的成年个体中随后的繁殖成功率增加。然而,在当年繁殖成功的成年个体仍然是最有可能在次年成功的,尽管它们使用了陆地生境。
我们的研究结果不仅独特地证明了整个迁徙期间的个体觅食特化,还证明了繁殖和秋季迁徙过程中的个体一致性,可能在远距离迁徙者的种群动态中起着至关重要的作用。因此,这些发现强调了长期一致性对我们理解栖息地功能、个体适应度差异、种群动态和迁徙策略进化的重要性。