Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California - Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California - Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2020 Apr;23(4):598-606. doi: 10.1111/ele.13460. Epub 2020 Jan 25.
The rescue effect in metapopulations hypothesises that less isolated patches are unlikely to go extinct because recolonisation may occur between breeding seasons ('recolonisation rescue'), or immigrants may sufficiently bolster population size to prevent extinction altogether ('demographic rescue'). These mechanisms have rarely been demonstrated directly, and most evidence of the rescue effect is from relationships between isolation and extinction. We determined the frequency of recolonisation rescue for metapopulations of black rails (Laterallus jamaicensis) and Virginia rails (Rallus limicola) from occupancy surveys conducted during and between breeding seasons, and assessed the reliability of inferences about the occurrence of rescue drawn from isolation-extinction relationships, including autologistic isolation measures that corrected for unsurveyed patches and imperfect detection. Recolonisation rescue occurred at expected rates, but was elevated during periods of disturbance that resulted in non-equilibrium metapopulation dynamics. Inferences from extinction-isolation relationships were unreliable, particularly for autologistic measures and for the more vagile Virginia rail.
复合种群的拯救效应假说认为,较为孤立的斑块不太可能灭绝,因为在繁殖季节之间可能会发生再定居(“再定居拯救”),或者移民可能会充分增加种群数量以防止灭绝(“人口拯救”)。这些机制很少被直接证明,而且拯救效应的大多数证据都来自隔离和灭绝之间的关系。我们通过繁殖季节内和繁殖季节之间进行的占有调查,确定了黑鹂(Laterallus jamaicensis)和弗吉尼亚鹬(Rallus limicola)复合种群的再定居拯救频率,并评估了从隔离-灭绝关系推断拯救发生的可靠性,包括纠正未调查斑块和不完全检测的自相关隔离措施。再定居拯救以预期的速度发生,但在导致非平衡复合种群动态的干扰时期有所增加。从灭绝-隔离关系推断的结果不可靠,特别是对于自相关措施和更敏捷的弗吉尼亚鹬。