Hansson Bengt, Bensch Staffan, Hasselquist Dennis, Nielsen Bo
Department of Animal Ecology, Ecology Building, Lund University, 223 62, Lund, Sweden.
Oecologia. 2002 Feb;130(4):536-542. doi: 10.1007/s00442-001-0831-2. Epub 2002 Feb 1.
In patchily distributed species dispersal connects local populations into metapopulations. Reliable quantifications of dispersal are therefore crucial to understanding the population dynamics and genetic structure of such metapopulation systems. The great reed warbler (Acrocephalus arundinaceus) inhabits eutrophic lakes and has a patchy breeding distribution. In this study we investigated the dispersal pattern of the great reed warbler based on an extensive capture-recapture effort covering a large census area (22,500 km). At two adjacent breeding sites (10 km apart) in southern Central Sweden, the "main study area", we ringed the majority of adult and nestling great reed warblers between 1992 and 1999. In 1998 and 1999, we opportunistically searched for territorial males at the majority of the Swedish breeding sites, and were able to examine about 56% of all males in the region. Analyses of recaptured males demonstrated that philopatry predominated. Sixty-nine percent of the recruiting nestlings returned to breed in the main study area (their natal area), and 92% of the resighted adults were found at the same breeding locality in both study years. Breeding dispersal was significantly more restricted than natal dispersal. Additional data on natal and breeding dispersal within the main study area in 1992-1999 suggested that females were as philopatric as males. The overall high level of philopatry, with only occasional longer dispersal distances documented, yielded a root-mean-square dispersal distance of 33 km per generation. High philopatry, short dispersal distances and similar dispersal patterns of male and female great reed warblers contrast the findings among birds in general, but conform to data of species having patchy breeding habitat and isolated populations. Restricted dispersal suggests limited gene flow even among several Swedish populations, which is in line with some previous findings of the population ecology of the great reed warbler: (1) structured mtDNA lineages among European populations; (2) small-scale population differences in song patterns; and (3) low genetic variation and occurrence of inbreeding depression in our main study population.
在分布零散的物种中,扩散将局部种群连接成集合种群。因此,对扩散进行可靠的量化对于理解此类集合种群系统的种群动态和遗传结构至关重要。大苇莺(Acrocephalus arundinaceus)栖息于富营养化湖泊,其繁殖分布零散。在本研究中,我们基于在一个大面积普查区域(22,500平方公里)展开的广泛标记重捕工作,调查了大苇莺的扩散模式。在瑞典中南部的“主要研究区域”,有两个相邻的繁殖地点(相距10公里),我们在1992年至1999年间给大多数成年和雏鸟大苇莺戴上了环志。在1998年和1999年,我们在瑞典的大多数繁殖地点随机搜寻具有领地意识的雄性大苇莺,得以检查该区域约56%的所有雄性大苇莺。对重新捕获的雄性大苇莺的分析表明,留居习性占主导。69%的新招募雏鸟回到主要研究区域(它们的出生地)繁殖,92%被重新观察到的成年大苇莺在两个研究年份都出现在同一个繁殖地点。繁殖扩散比出生扩散受到的限制明显更大。1992年至1999年主要研究区域内关于出生扩散和繁殖扩散的其他数据表明,雌性和雄性一样具有留居习性。总体而言,留居程度较高,仅偶尔有记录到较长的扩散距离,每代的均方根扩散距离为33公里。大苇莺较高的留居性、较短的扩散距离以及雄性和雌性相似的扩散模式与一般鸟类的研究结果形成对比,但与具有零散繁殖栖息地和孤立种群的物种的数据相符。有限制的扩散表明,即使在几个瑞典种群之间基因流动也有限,这与大苇莺种群生态学先前的一些研究结果一致:(1)欧洲种群间线粒体DNA谱系结构;(2)鸣声模式的小规模种群差异;(3)我们主要研究种群中低水平的遗传变异和近亲繁殖衰退的出现。