Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1090 GE, The Netherlands.
Eawag-Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Dübendorf, Switzerland.
Evolution. 2020 May;74(5):831-841. doi: 10.1111/evo.13957. Epub 2020 Apr 8.
Many animal species across different taxa change their habitat during their development. An ontogenetic habitat shift enables the development of early vulnerable-to-predation stages in a safe "nursery" habitat with reduced predation mortality, whereas less vulnerable stages can exploit a more risky, rich feeding habitat. Therefore, the timing of the habitat shift is crucial for individual fitness. We investigate the effect that size selectivity in mortality in the rich feeding habitat has on the optimal body size at which to shift between habitats using a population model that incorporates density dependence. We show that when mortality risk is more size dependent, it is optimal to switch to the risky habitat at a smaller rather than larger body size, despite that individuals can avoid mortality by staying longer in the nursery habitat and growing to safety in size. When size selectivity in mortality is high, large reproducing individuals are abundant and produce numerous offspring that strongly compete in the nursery habitat. A smaller body size at habitat shift is therefore favored because strong competition reduces growth potential. Our results reveal the interdependence among population structure, density dependence, and life history traits, and highlight the need for integrating ecological feedbacks in the study of life history evolution.
许多不同分类群的动物物种在其发育过程中会改变它们的栖息地。个体发生的栖息地转移使早期易受捕食的脆弱阶段能够在安全的“托儿所”栖息地中发育,从而降低捕食死亡率,而脆弱性较低的阶段可以利用更具风险但食物更丰富的栖息地。因此,栖息地转移的时机对个体适应度至关重要。我们使用包含密度依赖的种群模型,研究了丰富的摄食栖息地中死亡率的大小选择性对在栖息地之间转移的最佳体型的影响。结果表明,当死亡率风险更依赖于体型时,尽管个体通过在托儿所栖息地停留更长时间并生长到安全体型来避免死亡,那么在较小的体型而不是较大的体型时切换到风险栖息地是最优的。当死亡率的体型选择性较高时,大量繁殖的个体数量较多,它们在托儿所栖息地中产生大量后代,从而产生强烈的竞争。因此,在栖息地转移时体型较小更有利,因为强烈的竞争会降低生长潜力。我们的研究结果揭示了种群结构、密度依赖和生活史特征之间的相互依存关系,并强调了在研究生活史进化时需要整合生态反馈。