Department of Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e53726. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0053726. Epub 2013 Jan 16.
Knowledge of population processes across various ecological and management settings offers important insights for species conservation and life history. In regard to its ecological role, charisma and threats from human impacts, African elephants are of high conservation concern and, as a result, are the focus of numerous studies across various contexts. Here, demographic data from an individually based study of 934 African elephants in Samburu, Kenya were summarized, providing detailed inspection of the population processes experienced by the population over a fourteen year period (including the repercussions of recent increases in illegal killing). These data were compared with those from populations inhabiting a spectrum of xeric to mesic ecosystems with variable human impacts. In relation to variability in climate and human impacts (causing up to 50% of recorded deaths among adults), annual mortality in Samburu fluctuated between 1 and 14% and, unrelatedly, natality between 2 and 14% driving annual population increases and decreases. Survivorship in Samburu was significantly lower than other populations with age-specific data even during periods of low illegal killing by humans, resulting in relatively low life expectancy of males (18.9 years) and females (21.8 years). Fecundity (primiparous age and inter-calf interval) were similar to those reported in other human impacted or recovering populations, and significantly greater than that of comparable stable populations. This suggests reproductive effort of African savanna elephants increases in relation to increased mortality (and resulting ecological ramifications) as predicted by life history theory. Further comparison across populations indicated that elongated inter-calf intervals and older ages of reproductive onset were related to age structure and density, and likely influenced by ecological conditions. This study provides detailed empirical data on elephant population dynamics strongly influenced by human impacts (laying the foundation for modeling approaches), supporting predictions of evolutionary theory regarding demographic responses to ecological processes.
了解各种生态和管理环境中的种群过程,为物种保护和生活史提供了重要的见解。在其生态作用、魅力和人类影响的威胁方面,非洲象受到高度保护关注,因此成为许多不同背景下研究的焦点。在这里,总结了肯尼亚桑布鲁对 934 头非洲象进行的一项基于个体的研究的人口统计数据,详细检查了该种群在 14 年期间经历的种群过程(包括最近非法杀戮增加的影响)。将这些数据与栖息在不同干旱到湿润生态系统中的种群的数据进行了比较,这些生态系统的人类影响程度不同。与气候和人类影响的可变性有关(导致成年个体死亡的比例高达 50%),桑布鲁的年死亡率在 1%到 14%之间波动,并且出生率也在 2%到 14%之间波动,导致了每年的人口增减。桑布鲁的存活率明显低于其他有年龄特定数据的种群,即使在人类非法杀戮率较低的时期也是如此,导致雄性(18.9 岁)和雌性(21.8 岁)的预期寿命相对较低。繁殖力(初产年龄和幼仔间隔)与其他受人类影响或正在恢复的种群报告的繁殖力相似,明显高于可比稳定种群的繁殖力。这表明,正如生活史理论所预测的那样,非洲热带草原象的繁殖努力随着死亡率的增加(以及由此产生的生态后果)而增加。进一步对不同种群的比较表明,较长的幼仔间隔和生殖起始的较大年龄与年龄结构和密度有关,并且可能受到生态条件的影响。这项研究提供了受人类影响强烈影响的大象种群动态的详细经验数据(为建模方法奠定了基础),支持了关于人口对生态过程的反应的进化理论的预测。