Institute of Ecology, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Lüneburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 23;8(7):e70038. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070038. Print 2013.
Detailed understanding of a species' natural history and environmental needs across spatial scales is a primary requisite for effective conservation planning, particularly for species with complex life cycles in which different life stages occupy different niches and respond to the environment at different scales. However, niche models applied to conservation often neglect early life stages and are mostly performed at broad spatial scales. Using the endangered heath tiger beetle (Cicindela sylvatica) as a model species, we relate presence/absence and abundance data of locally dispersing adults and sedentary larvae to abiotic and biotic variables measured in a multiscale approach within the geographic extent relevant to active conservation management. At the scale of hundreds of meters, fine-grained abiotic conditions (i.e., vegetation structure) are fundamental determinants of the occurrence of both life stages, whereas the effect of biotic factors is mostly contained in the abiotic signature. The combination of dense heath vegetation and bare ground areas is thus the first requirement for the species' preservation, provided that accessibility to the suitable habitat is ensured. At a smaller scale (centimetres), the influence of abiotic factors on larval occurrence becomes negligible, suggesting the existence of important additional variables acting within larval proximity. Sustained significant correlations between neighbouring larvae in the models provide an indication of the potential impact of neighbourhood crowding on the larval niche within a few centimetres. Since the species spends the majority of its life cycle in the larval stage, it is essential to consider the hierarchical abiotic and biotic processes affecting the larvae when designing practical conservation guidelines for the species. This underlines the necessity for a more critical evaluation of the consequences of disregarding niche variation between life stages when estimating niches and addressing effective conservation measures for species with complex life cycles.
详细了解一个物种的自然历史和环境需求在空间尺度上是有效保护规划的首要要求,特别是对于生命周期复杂的物种,这些物种的不同生命阶段占据不同的生态位,并在不同的尺度上对环境做出反应。然而,应用于保护的生态位模型往往忽略了早期生命阶段,并且大多在广泛的空间尺度上进行。以濒危的 Heath 虎甲虫(Cicindela sylvatica)为例,我们将局部扩散的成虫和固定幼虫的存在/不存在和丰度数据与在与主动保护管理相关的地理范围内以多尺度方法测量的生物和非生物变量相关联。在数百米的尺度上,精细的非生物条件(即植被结构)是两个生命阶段发生的基本决定因素,而生物因素的影响主要包含在非生物特征中。因此,茂密的 Heath 植被和裸露地面区域的组合是该物种保存的首要要求,前提是确保对适宜栖息地的可达性。在较小的尺度(厘米)上,非生物因素对幼虫发生的影响可以忽略不计,这表明在幼虫附近存在重要的其他变量。模型中相邻幼虫之间持续显著的相关性表明,在几厘米的范围内,邻居拥挤对幼虫生态位可能产生潜在影响。由于该物种在其生命周期的大部分时间都处于幼虫阶段,因此在为该物种设计实际保护指南时,必须考虑影响幼虫的分层生物和非生物过程。这凸显了在估计小生境和解决生命周期复杂的物种的有效保护措施时,必须更批判性地评估忽略生命阶段之间小生境差异的后果。