Department of Animal Ecology, Netherlands Institute for Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Department of Animal Ecology and Physiology, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Ecology. 2022 Apr;103(4):e3615. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3615. Epub 2022 Mar 3.
Understanding which factors cause populations to decline begins with identifying which parts of the life cycle, and which vital rates, have changed over time. However, in a world where humans are altering the environment both rapidly and in different ways, the demographic causes of decline likely vary over time. Identifying temporal variation in demographic causes of decline is crucial to assure that conservation actions target current and not past threats. However, this has rarely been studied as it requires long time series. Here we investigate how the demography of a long-lived shorebird (the Eurasian Oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus) has changed in the past four decades, resulting in a shift from stable dynamics to strong declines (-9% per year), and recently back to a modest decline. Since individuals of this species are likely to respond differently to environmental change, we captured individual heterogeneity through three state variables: age, breeding status, and lay date (using integral projection models). Timing of egg-laying explained significant levels of variation in reproduction, with a parabolic relationship of maximal productivity near the average lay date. Reproduction explained most variation in population growth rates, largely due to poor nest success and hatchling survival. However, the demographic causes of decline have also been in flux over the last three decades: hatchling survival was low in the 2000s but improved in the 2010s, while adult survival declined in the 2000s and remains low today. Overall, the joint action of several key demographic variables explain the decline of the oystercatcher, and improvements in a single vital rate cannot halt the decline. Conservations actions will thus need to address threats occurring at different stages of the oystercatcher's life cycle. The dynamic nature of the threat landscape is further supported by the finding that the average individual no longer has the highest performance in the population, and emphasizes how individual heterogeneity in vital rates can play an important role in modulating population growth rates. Our results indicate that understanding population decline in the current era requires disentangling demographic mechanisms, individual variability, and their changes over time.
了解哪些因素导致种群减少,首先要确定生命周期的哪些部分以及哪些关键生育率随时间发生了变化。然而,在人类正在以不同的方式快速改变环境的世界中,种群减少的人口统计学原因可能随时间而变化。确定种群减少的人口统计学原因的时间变化对于确保保护措施针对当前而非过去的威胁至关重要。然而,由于这需要长时间序列,因此很少进行研究。在这里,我们研究了一种长寿涉禽(欧洲蛎鹬 Haematopus ostralegus)的种群动态在过去四十年中如何变化,导致从稳定动态转变为强烈减少(每年减少 9%),最近又回到适度减少。由于该物种的个体可能对环境变化有不同的反应,我们通过三个状态变量捕捉个体异质性:年龄、繁殖状态和产卵日期(使用积分预测模型)。产卵时间解释了繁殖的大量变化,最大生产力与平均产卵日期附近呈抛物线关系。繁殖解释了种群增长率的大部分变化,主要是由于巢成功率和雏鸟成活率低。然而,在过去的三十年中,种群减少的人口统计学原因也在不断变化:雏鸟成活率在 21 世纪 00 年代较低,但在 21 世纪 10 年代有所提高,而成年成活率在 21 世纪 00 年代下降,至今仍保持较低水平。总体而言,几个关键人口统计学变量的共同作用解释了蛎鹬的减少,而单一关键生育率的提高并不能阻止减少。因此,保护行动将需要解决在蛎鹬生命周期不同阶段发生的威胁。威胁景观的动态性质进一步得到支持的发现是,平均个体在种群中的表现不再最高,并强调了关键生育率的个体异质性如何在调节种群增长率方面发挥重要作用。我们的研究结果表明,要了解当前时代的种群减少,需要理清人口统计学机制、个体变异性及其随时间的变化。