Cooper Nathan W, Sherry Thomas W, Marra Peter P
Ecology. 2015 Jul;96(7):1933-42. doi: 10.1890/14-1365.1.
Many tropical habitats experience pronounced dry seasons, during which arthropod food availability declines, potentially limiting resident and migratory animal populations. In response to declines in food, individuals may attempt to alter their space use to enhance access to food resources, but may be socially constrained from doing so by con- and heterospecifics. If social constraints exist, food declines should result in decreased body condition. In migratory birds, correlational evidence suggests a link between body condition and migration timing. Poor body condition and delayed migration may, in turn, impact fitness in subsequent seasons via carry-over effects. To determine if winter food availability affects space use, inter- and intraspecific competition, body composition (i.e., mass, fat, and pectoral muscle), and migration timing, we experimentally decreased food availability on individual American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla) territories in high-quality mangrove habitat. Redstarts on control territories experienced -40% loss of food due to the seasonal nature of the environment. Redstarts on experimental territories experienced -80% declines in food, which closely mimicked natural declines in nearby, low-quality, scrub habitat. Individuals on food-reduced territories did not expand their territories locally, but instead either became non-territorial "floaters" or remained on territory. Regardless of territorial status, food-reduced American Redstarts all deposited fat compared to control birds. Fat deposits provide insurance against the risk of starvation, but, for American Redstarts, came at the expense of maintaining pectoral muscle. Subsequently, food-reduced American Redstarts experienced, on average, a one-week delay in departure on spring migration, likely due to the loss of pectoral muscle. Thus, our results demonstrate experimentally, for the first time, that declines in winter food availability can result in a fat-muscle trade-off, which, in turn, delays departure on spring migration. Previous work has demonstrated that, for each day delayed after the first male arrival on the breeding grounds, American Redstarts experience an 11% decrease in the chance of successfully reproducing. Therefore, such delays in departure likely lead to fitness costs for migratory birds. Because tropical seasonal forests are expected to become drier in response to global climate change, Neotropical migratory bird populations may experience significant winter food limitation, further exacerbating population declines in the coming decades.
许多热带栖息地都经历明显的旱季,在此期间节肢动物食物供应量下降,这可能会限制当地和迁徙动物的数量。为应对食物减少的情况,个体可能会试图改变其空间利用方式以增加获取食物资源的机会,但同种和异种个体可能会对其形成社会限制。如果存在社会限制,食物减少应会导致身体状况下降。在候鸟中,相关证据表明身体状况与迁徙时间之间存在联系。身体状况不佳和迁徙延迟可能反过来通过遗留效应影响后续季节的适应性。为了确定冬季食物供应量是否会影响空间利用、种间和种内竞争、身体组成(即体重、脂肪和胸肌)以及迁徙时间,我们在高质量红树林栖息地的美国红尾鸲(Setophaga ruticilla)个体领地内通过实验减少了食物供应量。由于环境的季节性,对照领地的红尾鸲经历了40%的食物损失。实验领地的红尾鸲食物量减少了80%,这与附近低质量灌丛栖息地的自然减少情况非常相似。食物减少领地的个体并没有在当地扩大其领地,而是要么变成无领地的“漂浮者”,要么留在领地内。无论领地状态如何,与对照鸟类相比,食物减少的美国红尾鸲都储存了脂肪。脂肪储存可抵御饥饿风险,但对美国红尾鸲来说,是以牺牲维持胸肌为代价的。随后,食物减少的美国红尾鸲春季迁徙平均推迟了一周,这可能是由于胸肌损失所致。因此,我们的结果首次通过实验证明,冬季食物供应量的减少会导致脂肪与肌肉的权衡,进而延迟春季迁徙的出发时间。先前的研究表明,在美国红尾鸲中,雄性首次到达繁殖地后每延迟一天,成功繁殖的几率就会降低11%。因此,这种出发延迟可能会给候鸟带来适应性成本。由于预计热带季节性森林会因全球气候变化而变得更加干燥,新热带地区的候鸟种群可能会在冬季面临严重的食物限制,这将在未来几十年进一步加剧种群数量的下降。