Caillaud Damien, Eckardt Winnie, Vecellio Veronica, Ndagijimana Felix, Mucyo Jean-Pierre, Hirwa Jean-Paul, Stoinski Tara
The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund, 800 Cherokee Ave. SE, Atlanta, GA 30315, USA.
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Davis, One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Sci Adv. 2020 Nov 4;6(45). doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aba0724. Print 2020 Nov.
Density-dependent processes such as competition for resources, migration, predation, and disease outbreaks limit the growth of natural populations. The analysis of 50 years of mountain gorilla data reveals that social behavior changes observed at high group density may also affect population growth in social species. A sudden increase in social group density observed in 2007 caused a threefold increase in the rate of violent encounters between social units (groups and solitary males). A fivefold increase in the rate of infanticide and seven cases of lethal fights among mature males were subsequently recorded, and the annual subpopulation growth rate declined by half between 2000 and 2017. The increase in infanticide alone explains 57% of this decline. These findings highlight the complex relationship between population density and growth in social species and hold important implications for the management of island populations.
诸如资源竞争、迁徙、捕食和疾病爆发等密度依赖过程限制了自然种群的增长。对50年山地大猩猩数据的分析表明,在高群体密度下观察到的社会行为变化也可能影响群居物种的种群增长。2007年观察到社会群体密度突然增加,导致社会单位(群体和独居雄性)之间暴力冲突率增加了两倍。随后记录到杀婴率增加了五倍,成年雄性之间发生了7起致命争斗,2000年至2017年间亚种群年增长率下降了一半。仅杀婴率的增加就解释了这种下降的57%。这些发现凸显了群居物种中种群密度与增长之间的复杂关系,对岛屿种群的管理具有重要意义。