Program in Ecology, Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, 82071, USA.
Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, 82071, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2021 Jun;31(4):e02299. doi: 10.1002/eap.2299. Epub 2021 Mar 8.
For ungulates and other long-lived species, life-history theory predicts that nutritional reserves are allocated to reproduction in a state-dependent manner because survival is highly conserved. Further, as per capita food abundance and nutritional reserves decline (i.e., density dependence intensifies), reproduction and recruitment become increasingly sensitive to weather. Thus, the degree to which weather influences vital rates should be associated with proximity to nutritional carrying capacity-a notion that we refer to as the Nutritional Buffer Hypothesis. We tested the Nutritional Buffer Hypothesis using six moose (Alces alces) populations that varied in calf recruitment (33-69 calves/100 cows). We predicted that populations with high calf recruitment were nutritionally buffered against the effects of unfavorable weather, and thus were below nutritional carrying capacity. We applied a suite of tools to quantify habitat and nutritional condition of each population and found that increased browse condition, forage quality, and body fat were associated with increased pregnancy and calf recruitment, thereby providing multiple lines of evidence that declines in calf recruitment were underpinned by resource limitation. From 2001 to 2015, recruitment was more sensitive to interannual variation in weather (e.g., winter severity, drought) and plant phenology (e.g., duration of spring) for populations with reduced browse condition, forage quality, and body fat, suggesting these populations lacked the nutritional reserves necessary to buffer demographic performance against the effects of unfavorable weather. Further, average within-population calf recruitment was determined by regional climatic variation, suggesting that the pattern of reduced recruitment near the southern range boundary of moose stems from an interaction between climate and resource limitation. When coupled with information on habitat, nutrition, weather, and climate, life-history theory provides a framework to estimate nutritional limitation, proximity to nutritional carrying capacity, and impacts of climate change for ungulates.
对于有蹄类动物和其他长寿物种,生活史理论预测,由于生存高度保守,营养储备会以依赖状态分配给繁殖。此外,随着人均食物丰度和营养储备的减少(即密度依赖性加剧),繁殖和补充越来越容易受到天气的影响。因此,天气对重要生命指标的影响程度应该与接近营养承载能力有关——我们称之为营养缓冲假说。我们使用六个不同小牛(驼鹿)补充率(33-69 头/100 头母牛)的驼鹿种群来检验营养缓冲假说。我们预测,小牛补充率高的种群在营养上不受不利天气的影响,因此低于营养承载能力。我们应用了一系列工具来量化每个种群的栖息地和营养状况,发现增加饲料状况、饲料质量和体脂肪与增加妊娠和小牛补充率有关,从而提供了多种证据表明小牛补充率的下降是由资源限制引起的。从 2001 年到 2015 年,对于饲料状况、饲料质量和体脂肪减少的种群,补充率对天气(例如冬季严重程度、干旱)和植物物候(例如春季持续时间)的年际变化更为敏感,这表明这些种群缺乏缓冲不利天气对人口统计表现影响的必要营养储备。此外,种群内平均小牛补充率由区域气候变异决定,这表明驼鹿南部分布边界附近补充率降低的模式是气候和资源限制相互作用的结果。当与有关栖息地、营养、天气和气候的信息结合使用时,生活史理论为估计营养限制、接近营养承载能力以及气候变化对有蹄类动物的影响提供了一个框架。