Finch Tom, Butler Simon J, Franco Aldina M A, Cresswell Will
School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ, UK.
Centre for Biological Diversity, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife, KY16 9TH, UK.
J Anim Ecol. 2017 May;86(3):662-673. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12635. Epub 2017 Feb 27.
Estimating how much long-distance migrant populations spread out and mix during the non-breeding season (migratory connectivity) is essential for understanding and predicting population dynamics in the face of global change. We quantify variation in population spread and inter-population mixing in long-distance, terrestrial migrant land-bird populations (712 individuals from 98 populations of 45 species, from tagging studies in the Neotropic and Afro-Palearctic flyways). We evaluate the Mantel test as a metric of migratory connectivity, and explore the extent to which variance in population spread can be explained simply by geography. The mean distance between two individuals from the same population during the non-breeding season was 743 km, covering 10-20% of the maximum width of Africa/South America. Individuals from different breeding populations tended to mix during the non-breeding season, although spatial segregation was maintained in species with relatively large non-breeding ranges (and, to a lesser extent, those with low population-level spread). A substantial amount of between-population variation in population spread was predicted simply by geography, with populations using non-breeding zones with limited land availability (e.g. Central America compared to South America) showing lower population spread. The high levels of population spread suggest that deterministic migration tactics are not generally adaptive; this makes sense in the context of the recent evolution of the systems, and the spatial and temporal unpredictability of non-breeding habitat. The conservation implications of generally low connectivity are that the loss (or protection) of any non-breeding site will have a diffuse but widespread effect on many breeding populations. Although low connectivity should engender population resilience to shifts in habitat (e.g. due to climate change), we suggest it may increase susceptibility to habitat loss. We hypothesize that, because a migrant species cannot adapt to both simultaneously, migrants generally may be more susceptible to population declines in the face of concurrent anthropogenic habitat and climate change.
估算长途迁徙种群在非繁殖季节的扩散范围和混合程度(迁徙连通性)对于理解和预测全球变化背景下的种群动态至关重要。我们对长途陆生迁徙陆鸟种群(来自新热带区和非洲-古北区迁徙路线标记研究的45个物种98个种群的712只个体)的种群扩散和种群间混合的变化进行了量化。我们评估了曼特尔检验作为迁徙连通性的指标,并探讨了种群扩散差异在多大程度上可以仅由地理因素来解释。在非繁殖季节,来自同一种群的两个个体之间的平均距离为743公里,覆盖了非洲/南美洲最大宽度的10%-20%。来自不同繁殖种群的个体在非繁殖季节往往会混合,尽管在非繁殖范围相对较大的物种(以及在较小程度上,种群水平扩散较低的物种)中保持了空间隔离。仅根据地理因素就可以预测种群扩散中大量的种群间差异,使用土地可用性有限的非繁殖区(如中美洲与南美洲相比)的种群显示出较低的种群扩散。高水平的种群扩散表明,确定性的迁徙策略通常并不具有适应性;这在该系统近期的演化以及非繁殖栖息地的空间和时间不可预测性的背景下是有意义的。连通性普遍较低的保护意义在于,任何非繁殖地点的丧失(或保护)将对许多繁殖种群产生分散但广泛的影响。尽管低连通性应使种群对栖息地变化(如由于气候变化)具有恢复力,但我们认为这可能会增加对栖息地丧失的易感性。我们假设,由于迁徙物种不能同时适应两者,面对同时发生的人为栖息地和气候变化,迁徙物种通常可能更容易种群数量下降。