West Elena H, Peery M Zachariah
Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.
Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.
Oecologia. 2017 Aug;184(4):787-798. doi: 10.1007/s00442-017-3898-0. Epub 2017 Jul 8.
General mechanisms underlying the distribution and fitness of synanthropic predators in human-influenced landscapes remain unclear. Under the consumer resource-matching hypothesis, synanthropes are expected to distribute themselves among habitats according to resource availability, such that densities are greater in human-subsidized habitats, but mean individual fitness is equal among habitats because of negative density dependence. However, "under-matching" to human food resources can occur, because dominant individuals exclude subordinates from subsidized habitats and realize relatively high fitness. We integrated physiological, behavioral, and demographic information to test resource-matching hypotheses in Steller's jays (Cyanocitta stelleri), a synanthropic nest predator, to understand how behavior and social systems can influence how synanthropes respond to food subsidies. Jays consumed more human foods at subsidized (park campground) sites than jays at unsubsidized (interior forest) sites based on stable isotope analyses. Jays that occurred at higher densities were in better body condition (based on feather growth bars and lipid analyses), and had greater reproductive output at subsidized than unsubsidized sites. Jays with breeding territories in subsidized sites maintained relatively small home ranges that overlapped with multiple conspecifics, and exhibited a social system where dominant individuals typically won contests over food. Thus, jays appeared to be under-matched to prevalent resource subsidies despite high densities and behaviors expected to lead to resource matching. Our results also indicate that local resource subsidies within protected areas can result in source habitats for synanthropes, potentially impacting sensitive species over broader spatial scales.
在受人类影响的景观中,伴人动物捕食者分布和适应性的一般机制仍不清楚。根据消费者资源匹配假说,伴人动物预计会根据资源可用性在栖息地之间分布,使得在人类补贴的栖息地中密度更高,但由于负密度依赖性,各栖息地中个体的平均适应性是相等的。然而,可能会出现对人类食物资源的“不匹配”情况,因为优势个体将下属排除在补贴栖息地之外,并实现相对较高的适应性。我们整合了生理、行为和人口统计学信息,以检验星鸦(Cyanocitta stelleri)这一伴人筑巢捕食者的资源匹配假说,以了解行为和社会系统如何影响伴人动物对食物补贴的反应。基于稳定同位素分析,与未补贴(内陆森林)地点的星鸦相比,补贴(公园露营地)地点的星鸦消耗了更多的人类食物。密度较高的星鸦身体状况更好(基于羽毛生长条和脂质分析),并且在补贴地点的繁殖产出比未补贴地点更高。在补贴地点拥有繁殖领地的星鸦维持相对较小的家域,且与多个同种个体的家域重叠,并表现出一种社会系统,其中优势个体通常在食物竞争中获胜。因此,尽管密度较高且存在预期会导致资源匹配的行为,但星鸦似乎与普遍的资源补贴不匹配。我们的结果还表明,保护区内的当地资源补贴可能会导致伴人动物的源栖息地,可能在更广泛的空间尺度上影响敏感物种。