Vincenzi Simone, Mangel Marc, Jesensˇek Dusˇan, Garza John C, Crivelli Alain J
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Center for Stock Assessment Research, University of California, 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA, 95064, USA.
Dipartimento di Elettronica, Informazione e Bioingegneria Politecnico di Milano, Via Ponzio 34/5, I-20133, Milan, Italy.
Ecol Appl. 2016 Oct;26(7):2086-2102. doi: 10.1890/15-1808.1. Epub 2016 Sep 2.
Understanding the causes of within- and among-population differences in vital rates, life histories, and population dynamics is a central topic in ecology. To understand how within- and among-population variation emerges, we need long-term studies that include episodic events and contrasting environmental conditions, data to characterize individual and shared variation, and statistical models that can tease apart shared and individual contribution to the observed variation. We used long-term tag-recapture data to investigate and estimate within- and among-population differences in vital rates, life histories, and population dynamics of marble trout Salmo marmoratus, an endemic freshwater salmonid with a narrow range. Only ten populations of pure marble trout persist in headwaters of Alpine rivers in western Slovenia. Marble trout populations are also threatened by floods and landslides, which have already caused the extinction of two populations in recent years. We estimated and determined causes of variation in growth, survival, and recruitment both within and among populations, and evaluated trade-offs between them. Specifically, we estimated the responses of these traits to variation in water temperature, density, sex, early life conditions, and extreme events. We found that the effects of population density on traits were mostly limited to the early stages of life and that growth trajectories were established early in life. We found no clear effects of water temperature on vital rates. Population density varied over time, with flash floods and debris flows causing massive mortalities (>55% decrease in survival with respect to years with no floods) and threatening population persistence. Apart from flood events, variation in population density within streams was largely determined by variation in recruitment, with survival of older fish being relatively constant over time within populations, but substantially different among populations. Marble trout show a fast to slow continuum of life histories, with slow growth associated with higher survival at the population level, possibly determined by food conditions and age at maturity. Our work provides unprecedented insight into the causes of variation in vital rates, life histories, and population dynamics in an endemic species that is teetering on the edge of extinction.
了解种群内和种群间在生命率、生活史和种群动态方面差异的原因是生态学的核心主题。为了理解种群内和种群间的变异是如何产生的,我们需要长期研究,包括偶发事件和对比环境条件、表征个体和共享变异的数据,以及能够区分共享和个体对观察到的变异所做贡献的统计模型。我们利用长期的标记重捕数据来调查和估计大理石鳟(Salmo marmoratus)的生命率、生活史和种群动态在种群内和种群间的差异,大理石鳟是一种分布范围狭窄的地方性淡水鲑科鱼类。在斯洛文尼亚西部的高山河流源头,仅存10个纯大理石鳟种群。大理石鳟种群还受到洪水和山体滑坡的威胁,近年来这已经导致两个种群灭绝。我们估计并确定了种群内和种群间生长、存活和补充的变异原因,并评估了它们之间的权衡。具体来说,我们估计了这些性状对水温、密度、性别、早期生活条件和极端事件变异的响应。我们发现,种群密度对性状的影响大多仅限于生命早期阶段,并且生长轨迹在生命早期就已确立。我们没有发现水温对生命率有明显影响。种群密度随时间变化,山洪暴发和泥石流导致大量死亡(相对于无洪水年份,存活率下降超过55%)并威胁种群的持续存在。除了洪水事件外,溪流内种群密度的变化在很大程度上由补充的变化决定,老龄鱼的存活在种群内随时间相对稳定,但在种群间差异很大。大理石鳟呈现出从快到慢的生活史连续体,在种群水平上,缓慢生长与较高的存活率相关,这可能由食物条件和成熟年龄决定。我们的工作为一种濒临灭绝的地方性物种在生命率、生活史和种群动态方面变异的原因提供了前所未有的见解。