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强制性合作繁殖者中的组内和组间动态。

Within- and between-group dynamics in an obligate cooperative breeder.

机构信息

Insititute of Zoology, London, UK.

Centre for Biodiversity and Environment Research, University College London, London, UK.

出版信息

J Anim Ecol. 2020 Feb;89(2):530-540. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13102. Epub 2019 Oct 19.

Abstract

Cooperative behaviour can have profound effects on demography. In many cooperative species, components of fitness (e.g. survival, reproductive success) are diminished in smaller social groups. These effects (termed group-level component Allee effects) may lead smaller groups to grow relatively slowly or fail to persist (termed group-level demographic Allee effects). If these group-level effects were to propagate to the population level, small populations would grow slowly or decline to extinction (termed population-level demographic Allee effects). However, empirical studies have revealed little evidence of such population-level effects. Theoretical studies suggest that dispersal behaviour could either cause or prevent the propagation of group-level Allee effects to the population level. We therefore characterized within- and between-pack dynamics in a population of African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) to test these contrasting model predictions. Larger wild dog packs produced more pups, and their members experienced higher survival than those in smaller packs. Nevertheless, larger packs grew more slowly than smaller packs, because natal adults dispersed away from them. Most packs either died out in whole-pack death events or broke up when their founders died, irrespective of pack size. Overall, packs showed negative density dependence rather than group-level demographic Allee effects. Larger packs produced more, but not larger, dispersal groups and hence generated more, but not larger, new packs. Larger packs thus contributed more than smaller packs to the number of packs in the population, but their large size did not propagate to their daughter packs. This pattern helps to explain the absence of population-level Allee effects in this species. Dispersal behaviour, itself driven by natural selection on individual reproductive strategies, played a pivotal role in population dynamics, leading to the formation of new packs and limiting the size of established packs. Understanding dispersal processes is likely to be important to understanding the population dynamics of other cooperatively breeding species.

摘要

合作行为对种群动态有深远影响。在许多合作物种中,适应度的组成部分(例如生存、繁殖成功)在较小的社会群体中减少。这些影响(称为群体水平的组件阿利效应)可能导致较小的群体生长相对缓慢或无法持续(称为群体水平的人口阿利效应)。如果这些群体水平的效应传播到种群水平,小种群的生长速度会变慢或灭绝(称为种群水平的人口阿利效应)。然而,实证研究几乎没有发现这种种群水平效应的证据。理论研究表明,扩散行为可能导致或阻止群体水平的阿利效应传播到种群水平。因此,我们对一群非洲野狗(Lycaon pictus)的群体内和群体间动态进行了描述,以检验这些相互矛盾的模型预测。较大的野狗群产生更多的幼崽,其成员的存活率高于较小的群体。然而,较大的群体生长速度比较小的群体慢,因为新生的成年个体从它们那里扩散出去。大多数群体要么在整个群体死亡事件中灭绝,要么在它们的创始人死亡时解散,无论群体规模大小。总体而言,群体表现出负密度依赖性,而不是群体水平的人口阿利效应。较大的群体产生更多的,但不是更大的,扩散群体,因此产生更多的,但不是更大的,新群体。较大的群体因此比较小的群体对种群中的群体数量贡献更大,但它们的大小不会传播到它们的子群体。这种模式有助于解释该物种中没有种群水平的阿利效应。扩散行为本身是由个体繁殖策略的自然选择驱动的,在种群动态中起着关键作用,导致新群体的形成和已建立群体的规模限制。了解扩散过程可能对理解其他合作繁殖物种的种群动态很重要。

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