Péron Guillaume, Altwegg Res, Jamie Gabriel A, Spottiswoode Claire N
Statistics in Ecology, Environment and Conservation, Department of Statistical Sciences, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, 7701, Cape Town, South Africa.
Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, National Zoological Park, Front Royal, VA, 22630, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2016 Sep;85(5):1191-9. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12546. Epub 2016 Jun 9.
As populations shift their ranges in response to global change, local species assemblages can change, setting the stage for new ecological interactions, community equilibria and evolutionary responses. Here, we focus on the range dynamics of four avian brood parasite species and their hosts in southern Africa, in a context of bush encroachment (increase in woody vegetation density in places previously occupied by savanna-grassland mosaics) favouring some species at the expense of others. We first tested whether hosts and parasites constrained each other's ability to expand or maintain their ranges. Secondly, we investigated whether range shifts represented an opportunity for new host-parasite and parasite-parasite interactions. We used multispecies dynamic occupancy models with interactions, fitted to citizen science data, to estimate the contribution of interspecific interactions to range shifts and to quantify the change in species co-occurrence probability over a 25-year period. Parasites were able to track their hosts' range shifts. We detected no deleterious effect of the parasites' presence on either the local population viability of host species or the hosts' ability to colonize newly suitable areas. In the recently diversified indigobird radiation (Vidua spp.), following bush encroachment, the new assemblages presented more potential opportunities for speciation via host switch, but also more potential for hybridization between extant lineages, also via host switch. Multispecies dynamic occupancy models with interactions brought new insights into the feedbacks between range shifts, biotic interactions and local demography: brood parasitism had little detected impact on extinction or colonization processes, but inversely the latter processes affected biotic interactions via the modification of co-occurrence patterns.
随着种群为应对全球变化而改变其分布范围,当地的物种组合可能会发生变化,为新的生态相互作用、群落平衡和进化反应创造条件。在此,我们聚焦于南部非洲四种鸟类巢寄生物种及其宿主的分布动态,背景是灌木丛入侵(在先前为稀树草原 - 草地镶嵌景观的地方木本植被密度增加),这有利于一些物种而不利于其他物种。我们首先测试宿主和寄生虫是否相互限制了对方扩展或维持其分布范围的能力。其次,我们调查分布范围的变化是否为新的宿主 - 寄生虫和寄生虫 - 寄生虫相互作用提供了机会。我们使用具有相互作用的多物种动态占用模型,将其拟合到公民科学数据中,以估计种间相互作用对分布范围变化的贡献,并量化25年期间物种共现概率的变化。寄生虫能够追踪其宿主的分布范围变化。我们未检测到寄生虫的存在对宿主物种的当地种群生存能力或宿主在新适宜区域定殖的能力有任何有害影响。在最近多样化的蓝翅雀辐射(Vidua属物种)中,灌木丛入侵后,新的组合通过宿主转换为物种形成提供了更多潜在机会,但也通过宿主转换使现存谱系之间有更多杂交的可能性。具有相互作用的多物种动态占用模型为分布范围变化、生物相互作用和当地种群统计学之间的反馈带来了新的见解:巢寄生对灭绝或定殖过程几乎没有检测到的影响,但相反,后一过程通过改变共现模式影响生物相互作用。