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北美两个沙漠中的水域开发和犬科动物:对水假说间接效应的检验。

Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.

机构信息

Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2013 Jul 2;8(7):e67800. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0067800. Print 2013.

Abstract

Anthropogenic modifications to landscapes intended to benefit wildlife may negatively influence wildlife communities. Anthropogenic provisioning of free water (water developments) to enhance abundance and distribution of wildlife is a common management practice in arid regions where water is limiting. Despite the long-term and widespread use of water developments, little is known about how they influence native species. Water developments may negatively influence arid-adapted species (e.g., kit fox, Vulpes macrotis) by enabling water-dependent competitors (e.g., coyote, Canis latrans) to expand distribution in arid landscapes (i.e., indirect effect of water hypothesis). We tested the two predictions of the indirect effect of water hypothesis (i.e., coyotes will visit areas with free water more frequently and kit foxes will spatially and temporally avoid coyotes) and evaluated relative use of free water by canids in the Great Basin and Mojave Deserts from 2010 to 2012. We established scent stations in areas with (wet) and without (dry) free water and monitored visitation by canids to these sites and visitation to water sources using infrared-triggered cameras. There was no difference in the proportions of visits to scent stations in wet or dry areas by coyotes or kit foxes at either study area. We did not detect spatial (no negative correlation between visits to scent stations) or temporal (no difference between times when stations were visited) segregation between coyotes and kit foxes. Visitation to water sources was not different for coyotes between study areas, but kit foxes visited water sources more in Mojave than Great Basin. Our results did not support the indirect effect of water hypothesis in the Great Basin or Mojave Deserts for these two canids.

摘要

人类为了使野生动物受益而对景观进行的改造可能会对野生动物群落产生负面影响。在水资源有限的干旱地区,为了增加和扩大野生动物的数量和分布,人为提供免费水源(水开发)是一种常见的管理做法。尽管水开发已经长期广泛应用,但人们对其如何影响本地物种知之甚少。水开发可能会通过使依赖水的竞争者(如郊狼,Canislatrans)在干旱景观中扩大分布,从而对适应干旱的物种(如草原狐,Vulpesmacrotis)产生负面影响(即水假说的间接效应)。我们检验了水假说间接效应的两个预测(即郊狼会更频繁地访问有免费水的区域,草原狐会在空间和时间上避开郊狼),并评估了2010 年至 2012 年大盆地和莫哈韦沙漠中犬科动物对自由水的相对利用情况。我们在有(湿)和没有(干)自由水的区域建立了气味站,并使用红外触发相机监测犬科动物对这些站点的访问情况以及对水源的访问情况。在两个研究区域,郊狼或草原狐对湿区或干区气味站的访问比例没有差异。我们没有检测到郊狼和草原狐之间的空间(气味站之间的访问没有负相关)或时间(访问时间没有差异)隔离。在两个研究区域,郊狼对水源的访问没有差异,但在莫哈韦沙漠中,草原狐访问水源的次数多于大盆地。我们的研究结果不支持大盆地或莫哈韦沙漠中这两种犬科动物的水假说的间接效应。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/86ce/3699512/0208eb516e36/pone.0067800.g001.jpg

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