Briggs-Gonzalez Venetia, Bonenfant Christophe, Basille Mathieu, Cherkiss Michael, Beauchamp Jeff, Mazzotti Frank
Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center, University of Florida, Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA.
Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Évolutive, Université de Lyon, CNRS, UMR 5558, Villeurbanne, France.
J Anim Ecol. 2017 Sep;86(5):1102-1113. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12723. Epub 2017 Jul 31.
Successful species conservation is dependent on adequate estimates of population dynamics, but age-specific demographics are generally lacking for many long-lived iteroparous species such as large reptiles. Accurate demographic information allows estimation of population growth rate, as well as projection of future population sizes and quantitative analyses of fitness trade-offs involved in the evolution of life-history strategies. Here, a long-term capture-recapture study was conducted from 1978 to 2014 on the American crocodile (Crocodylus acutus) in southern Florida. Over the study period, 7,427 hatchlings were marked and 380 individuals were recaptured for as many as 25 years. We estimated survival to be strongly age dependent with hatchlings having the lowest survival rates (16%) but increasing to nearly 90% at adulthood based on mark-recapture models. More than 5% of the female population were predicted to be reproductive by age 8 years; the age-specific proportion of reproductive females steadily increased until age 18 when more than 95% of females were predicted to be reproductive. Population growth rate, estimated from a Leslie-Lefkovitch stage-class model, showed a positive annual growth rate of 4% over the study period. Using a prospective sensitivity analysis, we revealed that the adult stage, as expected, was the most critical stage for population growth rate; however, the survival of younger crocodiles before they became reproductive also had a surprisingly high elasticity. We found that variation in age-specific fecundity has very limited impact on population growth rate in American crocodiles. We used a comparative approach to show that the original life-history strategy of American crocodiles is actually shared by other large, long-lived reptiles: while adult survival rates always have a large impact on population growth, this decreases with declining increasing growth rates, in favour of a higher elasticity of the juvenile stage. Crocodiles, as a long-lived and highly fecund species, deviate from the usual association of life histories of "slow" species. Current management practices are focused on nests and hatchling survival; however, protection efforts that extend to juvenile crocodiles would be most effective for conservation of the species, especially in an ever-developing landscape.
成功的物种保护依赖于对种群动态的充分估计,但对于许多长寿的多次繁殖物种,如大型爬行动物,通常缺乏特定年龄的种群统计学信息。准确的种群统计学信息有助于估计种群增长率,预测未来种群规模,并对生活史策略进化过程中涉及的适应性权衡进行定量分析。在此,1978年至2014年在佛罗里达州南部对美洲鳄(Crocodylus acutus)进行了一项长期的标记重捕研究。在研究期间,标记了7427只幼鳄,380只个体被重新捕获长达25年。根据标记重捕模型,我们估计存活率与年龄密切相关,幼鳄的存活率最低(16%),但成年后存活率增至近90%。预计超过5%的雌性种群在8岁时具有繁殖能力;繁殖雌性的年龄特异性比例稳步上升,直到18岁时预计超过95%的雌性具有繁殖能力。根据莱斯利 - 列夫科维奇阶段分类模型估计的种群增长率显示,在研究期间年增长率为4%。通过前瞻性敏感性分析,我们发现,正如预期的那样,成年阶段对种群增长率最为关键;然而,幼年鳄鱼在达到繁殖年龄之前的存活率也具有惊人的高弹性。我们发现,美洲鳄年龄特异性繁殖力的变化对种群增长率的影响非常有限。我们采用比较方法表明,美洲鳄的原始生活史策略实际上也为其他大型长寿爬行动物所共有:虽然成年存活率始终对种群增长有很大影响,但随着增长率下降,这种影响会减弱,转而有利于幼年阶段具有更高的弹性。鳄鱼作为一种长寿且繁殖力高的物种,偏离了“慢”物种通常的生活史关联。当前的管理措施主要集中在巢穴和幼鳄的存活上;然而,将保护工作扩展到幼年鳄鱼对该物种的保护最为有效,尤其是在不断发展的环境中。