Kiffner Christian, Kioko John, Leweri Cecilia, Krause Stefan
Centre For Wildlife Management Studies, The School For Field Studies, Karatu, Tanzania.
Centre For Wildlife Management Studies, The School For Field Studies, Karatu, Tanzania; Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute, Arusha, Tanzania.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 3;9(12):e113446. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113446. eCollection 2014.
Mixed mammal species groups are common in East African savannah ecosystems. Yet, it is largely unknown if co-occurrences of large mammals result from random processes or social preferences and if interspecific associations are consistent across ecosystems and seasons. Because species may exchange important information and services, understanding patterns and drivers of heterospecific interactions is crucial for advancing animal and community ecology. We recorded 5403 single and multi-species clusters in the Serengeti-Ngorongoro and Tarangire-Manyara ecosystems during dry and wet seasons and used social network analyses to detect patterns of species associations. We found statistically significant associations between multiple species and association patterns differed spatially and seasonally. Consistently, wildebeest and zebras preferred being associated with other species, whereas carnivores, African elephants, Maasai giraffes and Kirk's dik-diks avoided being in mixed groups. During the dry season, we found that the betweenness (a measure of importance in the flow of information or disease) of species did not differ from a random expectation based on species abundance. In contrast, in the wet season, we found that these patterns were not simply explained by variations in abundances, suggesting that heterospecific associations were actively formed. These seasonal differences in observed patterns suggest that interspecific associations may be driven by resource overlap when resources are limited and by resource partitioning or anti-predator advantages when resources are abundant. We discuss potential mechanisms that could drive seasonal variation in the cost-benefit tradeoffs that underpin the formation of mixed-species groups.
混合哺乳动物物种群在东非大草原生态系统中很常见。然而,大型哺乳动物的共存是由随机过程还是社会偏好导致的,以及种间关联在不同生态系统和季节是否一致,在很大程度上尚不清楚。由于物种可能会交换重要信息和服务,了解异种相互作用的模式和驱动因素对于推进动物和群落生态学至关重要。我们在旱季和雨季记录了塞伦盖蒂-恩戈罗恩戈罗以及塔兰吉雷-曼亚拉生态系统中的5403个单物种和多物种集群,并使用社会网络分析来检测物种关联模式。我们发现多个物种之间存在统计学上显著的关联,并且关联模式在空间和季节上有所不同。一致的是,角马和斑马更喜欢与其他物种关联,而食肉动物、非洲象、马赛长颈鹿和柯氏犬羚则避免处于混合群体中。在旱季,我们发现物种的中间中心性(一种衡量在信息或疾病传播中的重要性的指标)与基于物种丰度的随机预期没有差异。相比之下,在雨季,我们发现这些模式不能简单地用丰度变化来解释,这表明异种关联是主动形成的。观察到的这些季节性差异表明,种间关联在资源有限时可能由资源重叠驱动,而在资源丰富时可能由资源分配或反捕食优势驱动。我们讨论了可能驱动支撑混合物种群形成的成本效益权衡的季节性变化的潜在机制。