Department of Animal and Poultry Science, College of Agriculture and Bioresources, University of Saskatchewan, 51 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, SK, S7N 5E2, Canada.
J Anim Ecol. 2014 Jan;83(1):147-56. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12115. Epub 2013 Aug 9.
Density is a fundamental driver of many ecological processes including habitat selection. Theory on density-dependent habitat selection predicts that animals should be distributed relative to profitability of habitat, resulting in reduced specialization in selection (i.e. generalization) as density increases and competition intensifies. Despite mounting empirical support for density-dependent habitat selection using isodars to describe coarse-grained (interhabitat) animal movements, we know little of how density affects fine-grained resource selection of animals within habitats [e.g. using resource selection functions (RSFs)]. Using isodars and RSFs, we tested whether density simultaneously modified habitat selection and within-habitat resource selection in a rapidly growing population of feral horses (Equus ferus caballus Linnaeus; Sable Island, Nova Scotia, Canada; 42% increase in population size from 2008 to 2012). Among three heterogeneous habitat zones on Sable Island describing population clusters distributed along a west-east resource gradient (west-central-east), isodars revealed that horses used available habitat in a density-dependent manner. Intercepts and slopes of isodars demonstrated a pattern of habitat selection that first favoured the west, which generalized to include central and east habitats with increasing population size consistent with our understanding of habitat quality on Sable Island. Resource selection functions revealed that horses selected for vegetation associations similarly at two scales of extent (total island and within-habitat zone). When densities were locally low, horses were able to select for sites of the most productive forage (grasslands) relative to those of poorer quality. However, as local carrying capacity was approached, selection for the best of available forage types weakened while selection for lower-quality vegetation increased (and eventually exceeded that of grasslands). Isodars can effectively describe coarse-grained habitat selection in large mammals. Our study also shows that the main predictions of density-dependent habitat selection are highly relevant to our interpretation of RSFs in space and time. At low but not necessarily high population size, density will be a leading indicator of habitat quality. Fitness maximization from specialist vs. generalist strategies of habitat and resource selection may well be apparent at multiple spatial extents and grains of resolution.
密度是许多生态过程的基本驱动力,包括栖息地选择。关于密度依赖的栖息地选择的理论预测,随着密度的增加和竞争的加剧,动物应该根据栖息地的盈利能力进行分布,从而减少选择的专门化(即泛化)。尽管使用等距线来描述粗粒度(栖息地间)动物运动的密度依赖的栖息地选择得到了越来越多的经验支持,但我们对密度如何影响动物在栖息地内的细粒度资源选择知之甚少[例如,使用资源选择函数(RSF)]。使用等距线和 RSF,我们测试了在萨布尔岛(新斯科舍省,加拿大;2008 年至 2012 年,马群的种群规模增加了 42%)的快速增长的野马种群中,密度是否同时改变了栖息地选择和栖息地内资源选择。在萨布尔岛上三个描述沿西-东资源梯度分布的种群集群的异质栖息地带中,等距线表明马以密度依赖的方式使用可用的栖息地。等距线的截距和斜率表明了一种栖息地选择模式,该模式首先有利于西部,随着种群规模的增加,逐渐包括中部和东部栖息地,这与我们对萨布尔岛栖息地质量的理解一致。资源选择函数表明,在两个范围(整个岛屿和栖息地内区域)上,马对植被组合的选择相似。当密度在局部较低时,马能够选择最具生产力的饲料(草原)相对于质量较差的饲料。然而,当接近局部承载能力时,对最佳可用饲料类型的选择减弱,而对低质量植被的选择增加(最终超过草原)。等距线可以有效地描述大型哺乳动物的粗粒度栖息地选择。我们的研究还表明,密度依赖的栖息地选择的主要预测对我们在空间和时间上解释 RSF 具有高度相关性。在低但不一定是高的种群规模下,密度将是栖息地质量的主要指标。从栖息地和资源选择的专门化策略到一般化策略的适应度最大化可能在多个空间范围和分辨率的粒度上都很明显。