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海洋顶级捕食者的运动和种群动态中对猎物大小和分布变化的能量介导响应。

Energy-mediated responses to changing prey size and distribution in marine top predator movements and population dynamics.

机构信息

Department of Ecoscience, Aarhus University, Roskilde, Denmark.

Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany.

出版信息

J Anim Ecol. 2022 Jan;91(1):241-254. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13627. Epub 2021 Nov 22.

Abstract

Climate change is modifying the structure of marine ecosystems, including that of fish communities. Alterations in abiotic and biotic conditions can decrease fish size and change community spatial arrangement, ultimately impacting predator species which rely on these communities. To conserve predators and understand the drivers of observed changes in their population dynamics, we must advance our understanding of how shifting environmental conditions can impact populations by limiting food available to individuals. To investigate the impacts of changing fish size and spatial aggregation on a top predator population, we applied an existing agent-based model parameterized for harbour porpoises Phocoena phocoena which represents animal energetics and movements in high detail. We used this framework to quantify the impacts of shifting prey size and spatial aggregation on porpoise movement, space use, energetics and population dynamics. Simulated individuals were more likely to switch from area-restricted search to transit behaviour with increasing prey size, particularly when starving, due to elevated resource competition. In simulations with highly aggregated prey, higher prey encounter rates counteracted resource competition, resulting in no impacts of prey spatial aggregation on movement behaviour. Reduced energy intake with decreasing prey size and aggregation level caused population decline, with a 15% decrease in fish length resulting in total population collapse Increasing prey consumption rates by 42.8 ± 4.5% could offset population declines; however, this increase was 21.3 ± 12.7% higher than needed to account for changes in total energy availability alone. This suggests that animals in realistic seascapes require additional energy to locate smaller prey which should be considered when assessing the impacts of decreased energy availability. Changes in prey size and aggregation influenced movements and population dynamics of simulated harbour porpoises, revealing that climate-induced changes in prey structure, not only prey abundance, may threaten predator populations. We demonstrate how a population model with realistic animal movements and process-based energetics can be used to investigate population consequences of shifting food availability, such as those mediated by climate change, and provide a mechanistic explanation for how changes in prey structure can impact energetics, behaviour and ultimately viability of predator populations.

摘要

气候变化正在改变海洋生态系统的结构,包括鱼类群落。非生物和生物条件的改变会减小鱼类的体型并改变群落的空间排列,最终影响依赖这些群落的捕食者物种。为了保护捕食者并了解其种群动态变化的驱动因素,我们必须深入了解环境条件的变化如何通过限制个体可获得的食物来影响种群。为了研究鱼类体型和空间聚集变化对顶级捕食者种群的影响,我们应用了一个现有的基于代理的模型,该模型针对港海豹 Phocoena phocoena 进行了参数化,该模型详细代表了动物的能量学和运动。我们使用这个框架来量化改变猎物大小和空间聚集对海豚运动、空间利用、能量学和种群动态的影响。模拟个体在猎物体型增大时,尤其是在饥饿时,更有可能从区域限制搜索切换为过境行为,因为资源竞争加剧。在猎物高度聚集的模拟中,较高的猎物遭遇率抵消了资源竞争,因此猎物空间聚集对运动行为没有影响。随着猎物体型和聚集水平的降低,能量摄入减少导致种群下降,猎物体长减少 15%导致总种群崩溃。猎物消耗率增加 42.8 ± 4.5%可抵消种群下降;然而,这一增加比仅考虑总能量供应变化所需的增加高出 21.3 ± 12.7%。这表明,在现实海域中,动物需要额外的能量来定位更小的猎物,在评估能量供应减少的影响时应考虑到这一点。猎物大小和聚集的变化影响了模拟港海豹的运动和种群动态,表明气候引起的猎物结构变化,而不仅仅是猎物数量的变化,可能会威胁到捕食者种群。我们展示了如何使用具有现实动物运动和基于过程的能量学的种群模型来研究食物可获得性变化对种群的影响,例如气候变化引起的变化,并为猎物结构变化如何影响能量学、行为并最终影响捕食者种群的生存能力提供了一种机制解释。

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