University of Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CNRS, UMR 5558, Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, F-769622 Villeurbanne, France.
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Sep 20;119(38):e2206805119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2206805119. Epub 2022 Sep 12.
Habitat anthropization is a major driver of global biodiversity decline. Although most species are negatively affected, some benefit from anthropogenic habitat modifications by showing intriguing life-history responses. For instance, increased recruitment through higher allocation to reproduction or improved performance during early-life stages could compensate for reduced adult survival, corresponding to "compensatory recruitment". To date, evidence of compensatory recruitment in response to habitat modification is restricted to plants, limiting understanding of its importance as a response to global change. We used the yellow-bellied toad (), an amphibian occupying a broad range of natural and anthropogenic habitats, as a model species to test for and to quantify compensatory recruitment. Using an exceptional capture-recapture dataset composed of 21,714 individuals from 67 populations across Europe, we showed that adult survival was lower, lifespan was shorter, and actuarial senescence was higher in anthropogenic habitats, especially those affected by intense human activities. Increased recruitment in anthropogenic habitats fully offset reductions in adult survival, with the consequence that population growth rate in both habitat types was similar. Our findings indicate that compensatory recruitment allows toad populations to remain viable in human-dominated habitats and might facilitate the persistence of other animal populations in such environments.
人类活动导致的栖息地变化是全球生物多样性减少的主要驱动因素。尽管大多数物种受到负面影响,但有些物种通过表现出有趣的生活史响应而受益于人为的栖息地改变。例如,通过更高的生殖分配或改善早期生命阶段的表现来增加繁殖,可以补偿成年期生存的降低,这对应于“补偿性繁殖”。迄今为止,关于对栖息地改变的补偿性繁殖的证据仅限于植物,限制了对其作为应对全球变化的重要性的理解。我们使用黄腹蟾蜍()作为模型物种,该物种栖息在广泛的自然和人为栖息地中,以测试和量化补偿性繁殖。我们利用一个由欧洲 67 个种群的 21714 个个体组成的特殊捕获-再捕获数据集表明,在人为栖息地中,特别是在受人类活动强烈影响的栖息地中,成年个体的存活率较低,寿命较短,衰老速度较快。在人为栖息地中,繁殖的增加完全抵消了成年个体存活率的降低,因此两种栖息地类型的种群增长率相似。我们的研究结果表明,补偿性繁殖使蟾蜍种群在人类主导的栖息地中保持存活,并可能促进其他动物种群在这些环境中的持续存在。