School of Biological Sciences, Zoology Building, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Centre for Biodiversity Dynamics, Institutt for Biologi, NTNU, Trondheim, Norway.
J Anim Ecol. 2022 Jan;91(1):20-34. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13615. Epub 2021 Nov 7.
Conceptual and methodological advances in population and evolutionary ecology are often pursued with the ambition that they will help identify demographic, ecological and genetic constraints on population growth rate (λ), and ultimately facilitate evidence-based conservation. However, such advances are often decoupled from conservation practice, impeding translation of scientific understanding into effective conservation and of conservation-motivated research into wider conceptual understanding. We summarise key outcomes from long-term studies of a red-billed chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax population of conservation concern, where we proactively aimed to achieve the dual and interacting objectives of advancing population and evolutionary ecology and advancing effective conservation. Estimation of means, variances and covariances in key vital rates from individual-based demographic data identified temporal and spatial variation in subadult survival as key constraints on λ, and simultaneously provided new insights into how vital rates can vary as functions of demographic structure, natal conditions and parental life history. Targeted analyses showed that first-year survival increased with prey abundance, implying that food limitation may constrain λ. First-year survival then decreased dramatically, threatening population viability and prompting emergency supplementary feeding interventions. Detailed evaluations suggested that the interventions successfully increased first-year survival in some years and additionally increased adult survival and successful reproduction, thereby feeding back to inform intervention refinements and understanding of complex ecological constraints on λ. Genetic analyses revealed novel evidence of expression of a lethal recessive allele, and demonstrated how critically small effective population size can arise, thereby increasing inbreeding and loss of genetic variation. Population viability analyses parameterised with all available demographic and genetic data showed how ecological and genetic constraints can interact to limit population viability, and identified ecological management as of primacy over genetic management to ensure short-term persistence of the focal population. This case study demonstrates a full iteration through the sequence of primary science, evidence-based intervention, quantitative evaluation and feedback that is advocated in conservation science but still infrequently achieved. It thereby illustrates how pure science advances informed conservation actions to ensure the (short-term) stability of the target population, and how conservation-motivated analyses fed back to advance fundamental understanding of population processes.
概念和方法上的进展在人口和进化生态学中经常追求的雄心壮志,他们将帮助确定人口,生态和遗传限制增长率(λ),并最终促进基于证据的保护。然而,这些进展往往与保护实践脱节,阻碍了科学认识转化为有效保护,以及保护动机的研究转化为更广泛的概念理解。我们总结了长期研究的关键成果红嘴山鸦 Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax 种群的保护关注,我们主动旨在实现双重和相互作用的目标,即推进人口和进化生态学以及推进有效保护。从基于个体的人口统计数据中估计关键生命率的平均值,方差和协方差,确定亚成年存活率的时空变化是限制 λ 的关键限制因素,同时提供了有关生命率如何作为人口结构,出生条件和父母生活史的函数而变化的新见解。有针对性的分析表明,第一年的存活率随猎物丰度的增加而增加,这意味着食物限制可能限制 λ。第一年的存活率随后急剧下降,威胁到种群的生存能力,并促使紧急补充喂养干预。详细的评估表明,这些干预措施在某些年份成功地提高了第一年的存活率,并且还增加了成年的存活率和成功繁殖,从而反馈信息以改进干预措施并了解对 λ 的复杂生态限制。遗传分析揭示了表达致命隐性等位基因的新证据,并证明了有效种群规模如何极小,从而增加了近亲繁殖和遗传变异的丧失。使用所有可用的人口统计和遗传数据参数化的种群生存力分析表明,生态和遗传限制如何相互作用以限制种群生存能力,并确定生态管理优先于遗传管理,以确保目标种群的短期生存。这个案例研究展示了在保护科学中提倡的但仍很少实现的主要科学,基于证据的干预,定量评估和反馈的完整迭代。它说明了纯粹的科学如何促进保护行动以确保目标种群的(短期)稳定性,以及保护动机的分析如何反馈以促进对人口过程的基本理解。