Sutcliffe O L, Thomas Chris D, Peggie D
Department of Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK, , , , , , GB.
Centre for Population Biology, Imperial College at Silwood Park, Ascot, Berks, SL5 7PY, UK, , , , , , GB.
Oecologia. 1997 Jan;109(2):229-234. doi: 10.1007/s004420050077.
Interpretation of spatially structured population systems is critically dependent on levels of migration between habitat patches. If there is considerable movement, with each individual visiting several patches, there is one "patchy population"; if there is intermediate movement, with most individuals staying within their natal patch, there is a metapopulation; and if (virtually) no movement occurs, then the populations are separate (Harrison 1991, 1994). These population types actually represent points along a continuum of much to no mobility in relation to patch structure. Therefore, interpretation of the effects of spatial structure on the dynamics of a population system must be accompanied by information on mobility. We use empirical data on movements by ringlet butterflies, Aphantopus hyperantus, to investigate two key issues that need to be resolved in spatially-structured population systems. First, do local habitat patches contain largely independent local populations (the unit of a metapopulation), or merely aggregations of adult butterflies (as in patchy populations)? Second, what are the effects of patch area on migration in and out of the patches, since patch area varies considerably within most real population systems, and because human landscape modification usually results in changes in habitat patch sizes? Mark-release-recapture (MRR) data from two spatially structured study systems showed that 63% and 79% of recaptures remained in the same patch, and thus it seems reasonable to call both systems metapopulations, with some capacity for separate local dynamics to take place in different local patches. Per capita immigration and emigration rates declined with increasing patch area, while the resident fraction increased. Actual numbers of emigrants either stayed the same or increased with area. The effect of patch area on movement of individuals in the system are exactly what we would have expected if A. hyperantus were responding to habitat geometry. Large patches acted as local populations (metapopulation units) and small patches simply as locations with aggregations (units of patchy populations), all within 0.5 km. Perhaps not unusually, our study system appears to contain a mixture of metapopulation and patchy-population attributes.
对空间结构化种群系统的解读严重依赖于栖息地斑块之间的迁移水平。如果有大量的移动,每个个体都访问多个斑块,那就是一个“斑块状种群”;如果有中等程度的移动,大多数个体留在其出生的斑块内,那就是一个集合种群;而如果(实际上)没有移动发生,那么这些种群就是相互独立的(哈里森,1991年,1994年)。这些种群类型实际上代表了在与斑块结构相关的从大量到无移动性的连续统一体上的各个点。因此,对空间结构对种群系统动态影响的解读必须伴有关于移动性的信息。我们使用小眼蝶(Aphantopus hyperantus)移动的实证数据来研究在空间结构化种群系统中需要解决的两个关键问题。第一,局部栖息地斑块是否主要包含独立的局部种群(集合种群的单位),还是仅仅是成年蝴蝶的聚集(如在斑块状种群中)?第二,斑块面积对进出斑块的迁移有什么影响,因为在大多数实际种群系统中斑块面积差异很大,而且人类景观改造通常会导致栖息地斑块大小的变化?来自两个空间结构化研究系统的标记重捕(MRR)数据表明,63%和79%的重捕个体留在了同一个斑块中,因此将这两个系统都称为集合种群似乎是合理的,它们有一定能力在不同的局部斑块中发生独立的局部动态。人均迁入和迁出率随着斑块面积的增加而下降,而居留比例增加。实际迁出个体数量要么保持不变,要么随着面积增加。如果小眼蝶对栖息地几何形状做出反应,那么斑块面积对系统中个体移动的影响正是我们所预期的。大斑块充当局部种群(集合种群单位),小斑块仅仅作为有聚集的地点(斑块状种群单位),所有这些都在0.5公里范围内。也许并不罕见的是,我们的研究系统似乎包含集合种群和斑块状种群的混合属性。