Delhey Kaspar, Peters Anne
School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, 25 Rainforest Walk, Clayton, VIC, 3800, Australia.
Conserv Biol. 2017 Feb;31(1):30-39. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12834. Epub 2016 Dec 14.
Anthropogenic environmental impacts can disrupt the sensory environment of animals and affect important processes from mate choice to predator avoidance. Currently, these effects are best understood for auditory and chemosensory modalities, and recent reviews highlight their importance for conservation. We examined how anthropogenic changes to the visual environment (ambient light, transmission, and backgrounds) affect visual communication and camouflage and considered the implications of these effects for conservation. Human changes to the visual environment can increase predation risk by affecting camouflage effectiveness, lead to maladaptive patterns of mate choice, and disrupt mutualistic interactions between pollinators and plants. Implications for conservation are particularly evident for disrupted camouflage due to its tight links with survival. The conservation importance of impaired visual communication is less documented. The effects of anthropogenic changes on visual communication and camouflage may be severe when they affect critical processes such as pollination or species recognition. However, when impaired mate choice does not lead to hybridization, the conservation consequences are less clear. We suggest that the demographic effects of human impacts on visual communication and camouflage will be particularly strong when human-induced modifications to the visual environment are evolutionarily novel (i.e., very different from natural variation); affected species and populations have low levels of intraspecific (genotypic and phenotypic) variation and behavioral, sensory, or physiological plasticity; and the processes affected are directly related to survival (camouflage), species recognition, or number of offspring produced, rather than offspring quality or attractiveness. Our findings suggest that anthropogenic effects on the visual environment may be of similar importance relative to conservation as anthropogenic effects on other sensory modalities.
人为环境影响会扰乱动物的感官环境,并影响从配偶选择到躲避捕食者等重要过程。目前,对于听觉和化学感应方式,人们对这些影响的理解最为透彻,最近的综述强调了它们在保护方面的重要性。我们研究了人为对视觉环境的改变(环境光、透射率和背景)如何影响视觉通讯和伪装,并考虑了这些影响对保护的意义。人类对视觉环境的改变会通过影响伪装效果增加捕食风险,导致配偶选择出现适应不良模式,并扰乱传粉者与植物之间的互利共生相互作用。由于伪装与生存紧密相关,其对保护的影响尤为明显。视觉通讯受损对保护的重要性记录较少。当人为改变影响授粉或物种识别等关键过程时,对视觉通讯和伪装的影响可能很严重。然而,当配偶选择受损未导致杂交时,保护后果则不太明确。我们认为,当人为对视觉环境的改变在进化上是新颖的(即与自然变异非常不同);受影响的物种和种群种内(基因型和表型)变异水平以及行为、感官或生理可塑性较低;且受影响的过程与生存(伪装)、物种识别或产生的后代数量直接相关,而非后代质量或吸引力时,人类对视觉通讯和伪装的影响在人口统计学上会特别强烈。我们的研究结果表明,人为对视觉环境的影响相对于保护而言,可能与人为对其他感官方式的影响具有相似的重要性。