Center for Population Biology, University of California-Davis, Davis, California, 95616, USA.
School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287-4501, USA.
Ecology. 2018 Dec;99(12):2815-2822. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2546. Epub 2018 Nov 19.
Many wildlife populations are either naturally, or as a result of human land use, patchily distributed in space. The degree of fragmentation-specifically the remaining patch sizes and habitat configuration-is an important part of population dynamics. Demographic stochasticity is also likely to play an important role in patchy habitats that host small local populations. We develop a simulation model to evaluate the significance of demographic stochasticity and the role fragmentation plays in the determination of population dynamics and the risk of extinction of populations on habitat patches. Our model is formulated as a Markov-chain stochastic process on a finite, spatially explicit array of patches in which probability of successful dispersal is a function of interpatch distance. Unlike past work, we explicitly model local population dynamics and examine how these scale up to the entire population. As a test case, we apply the model to the American pika (Ochotona princeps) population living on the ore dumps in the ghost mining town of Bodie, California. This population has been studied nearly continuously for over four decades and has been of conservation concern as the southern half of the population declined precipitously beginning in 1989. Our model suggests that both the specific configuration of habitat and landscape heterogeneity are necessary and sufficient predictors of the eventual extinction of the southern constellation of patches. This example has important implications, as it suggests that fragmentation alone can lead to regional extinctions within metapopulations.
许多野生动物种群的分布在空间上是不均匀的,要么是自然的,要么是由于人类的土地利用造成的。碎片化的程度——特别是剩余斑块的大小和栖息地的配置——是种群动态的一个重要组成部分。在那些容纳小局部种群的斑块栖息地中,种群的动态性也可能受到人口统计学随机性的重要影响。我们开发了一个模拟模型来评估人口统计学随机性的重要性以及破碎化在确定栖息地斑块上的种群动态和灭绝风险方面的作用。我们的模型是一个马尔可夫链随机过程,在一个有限的、空间显式的斑块阵列上,其中成功扩散的概率是斑块间距离的函数。与过去的工作不同,我们明确地模拟了局部种群动态,并研究了这些动态如何扩展到整个种群。作为一个测试案例,我们将该模型应用于生活在加利福尼亚州博迪幽灵采矿镇矿渣上的美洲鼠兔(Ochotona princeps)种群。这个种群已经被研究了四十多年,由于南部种群从 1989 年开始急剧减少,人们一直对其保护表示关注。我们的模型表明,栖息地的具体配置和景观异质性都是南部斑块星座最终灭绝的必要和充分预测因子。这个例子具有重要的意义,因为它表明,仅仅是碎片化就可能导致同域种群的区域灭绝。