Luskin Matthew Scott, Johnson Daniel J, Ickes Kalan, Yao Tze Leong, Davies Stuart J
School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Forest Global Earth Observatory, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Washington, DC, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2021 Mar 10;288(1946):20210001. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2021.0001. Epub 2021 Mar 3.
Large vertebrates are rarely considered important drivers of conspecific negative density-dependent mortality (CNDD) in plants because they are generalist consumers. However, disturbances like trampling and nesting also cause plant mortality, and their impact on plant diversity depends on the spatial overlap between wildlife habitat preferences and plant species composition. We studied the impact of native wildlife on a hyperdiverse tree community in Malaysia. Pigs () are abnormally abundant at the site due to food subsidies in nearby farmland and they construct birthing nests using hundreds of tree saplings. We tagged 34 950 tree saplings in a 25 ha plot during an initial census and assessed the source mortality by recovering tree tags from pig nests ( = 1672 pig-induced deaths). At the stand scale, pigs nested in flat dry habitats, and at the local neighbourhood scale, they nested within clumps of saplings, both of which are intuitive for safe and efficient nest building. At the stand scale, flat dry habitats contained higher sapling densities and higher proportions of common species, so pig nesting increased the weighted average species evenness across habitats. At the neighbourhood scale, pig-induced sapling mortality was associated with higher heterospecific and especially conspecific sapling densities. Tree species have clumped distributions due to dispersal limitation and habitat filtering, so pig disturbances in sapling clumps indirectly caused CNDD. As a result, Pielou species evenness in 400 m quadrats increased 105% more in areas with pig-induced deaths than areas without disturbances. Wildlife induced CNDD and this supported tree species evenness, but they also drove a 62% decline in sapling densities from 1996 to 2010, which is unsustainable. We suspect pig nesting is an important feature shaping tree composition throughout the region.
大型脊椎动物很少被认为是植物种内负密度制约死亡率(CNDD)的重要驱动因素,因为它们是广食性消费者。然而,诸如践踏和筑巢等干扰也会导致植物死亡,其对植物多样性的影响取决于野生动物栖息地偏好与植物物种组成之间的空间重叠。我们研究了本土野生动物对马来西亚一个高度多样化树木群落的影响。由于附近农田的食物补贴,猪( )在该地点异常丰富,并且它们用数百棵树苗建造产仔巢。在初始普查期间,我们在一个25公顷的地块中标记了34950棵树苗,并通过从猪巢中找回树标来评估来源死亡率( = 1672头猪导致的死亡)。在林分尺度上,猪在平坦干燥的栖息地筑巢,在局部邻域尺度上,它们在树苗丛中筑巢,这两者对于安全高效地筑巢来说都是直观的。在林分尺度上,平坦干燥的栖息地包含更高的树苗密度和更高比例的常见物种,因此猪筑巢增加了各栖息地加权平均物种均匀度。在邻域尺度上,猪导致的树苗死亡率与更高的异种,尤其是同种树苗密度相关。由于扩散限制和栖息地过滤,树种呈聚集分布,因此树苗丛中的猪干扰间接导致了CNDD。结果,在有猪导致死亡的区域,400平方米样方中的皮洛物种均匀度比无干扰区域增加了105%。野生动物导致了CNDD,这支持了树种均匀度,但它们也导致1996年至2010年树苗密度下降了62%,这是不可持续的。我们怀疑猪筑巢是塑造该地区树木组成的一个重要特征。