Polyakov Anne Y, Tietje William D, Srivathsa Arjun, Rolland Virginie, Hines James E, Oli Madan K
Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California Berkeley CA USA.
School of Natural Resources and Environment University of Florida Gainesville FL USA.
Ecol Evol. 2021 Aug 16;11(18):12529-12541. doi: 10.1002/ece3.7997. eCollection 2021 Sep.
In semi-arid environments, aperiodic rainfall pulses determine plant production and resource availability for higher trophic levels, creating strong bottom-up regulation. The influence of climatic factors on population vital rates often shapes the dynamics of small mammal populations in such resource-restricted environments. Using a 21-year biannual capture-recapture dataset (1993 to 2014), we examined the impacts of climatic factors on the population dynamics of the brush mouse () in semi-arid oak woodland of coastal-central California. We applied Pradel's temporal symmetry model to estimate capture probability (), apparent survival (), recruitment (), and realized population growth rate () of the brush mouse and examined the effects of temperature, rainfall, and El Niño on these demographic parameters. The population was stable during the study period with a monthly realized population growth rate of 0.993 ± 0.032, but growth varied over time from 0.680 ± 0.054 to 1.450 ± 0.083. Monthly survival estimates averaged 0.789 ± 0.005 and monthly recruitment estimates averaged 0.175 ± 0.038. Survival probability and realized population growth rate were positively correlated with rainfall and negatively correlated with temperature. In contrast, recruitment was negatively correlated with rainfall and positively correlated with temperature. Brush mice maintained their population through multiple coping strategies, with high recruitment during warmer and drier periods and higher survival during cooler and wetter conditions. Although climatic change in coastal-central California will likely favor recruitment over survival, varying strategies may serve as a mechanism by which brush mice maintain resilience in the face of climate change. Our results indicate that rainfall and temperature are both important drivers of brush mouse population dynamics and will play a significant role in predicting the future viability of brush mice under a changing climate.
在半干旱环境中,不定期的降雨脉冲决定了植物的产量以及较高营养级的资源可利用性,从而形成强大的自下而上的调节作用。在这种资源受限的环境中,气候因素对种群生命率的影响常常塑造了小型哺乳动物种群的动态变化。利用一个为期21年的双年度标记重捕数据集(1993年至2014年),我们研究了气候因素对加利福尼亚州中部沿海半干旱橡树林中灌丛鼠()种群动态的影响。我们应用普拉德尔时间对称模型来估计灌丛鼠的捕获概率()、表观存活率()、补充率()和实际种群增长率(),并研究了温度、降雨和厄尔尼诺对这些种群统计学参数的影响。在研究期间,该种群保持稳定,月实际种群增长率为0.993±0.032,但增长率随时间变化,范围在0.680±0.054至1.450±0.083之间。月存活率估计平均为0.789±0.005,月补充率估计平均为0.175±0.038。存活概率和实际种群增长率与降雨量呈正相关,与温度呈负相关。相反,补充率与降雨量呈负相关,与温度呈正相关。灌丛鼠通过多种应对策略维持其种群数量,在温暖干燥时期补充率较高,在凉爽湿润条件下存活率较高。尽管加利福尼亚州中部沿海的气候变化可能更有利于补充而非存活,但不同的策略可能是灌丛鼠在面对气候变化时保持恢复力的一种机制。我们的结果表明,降雨和温度都是灌丛鼠种群动态的重要驱动因素,并且在预测气候变化下灌丛鼠未来的生存能力方面将发挥重要作用。