Department of Biosciences, Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA.
Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Dec;28(24):7205-7216. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16434. Epub 2022 Sep 29.
The spatial aggregation of species pairs often increases with the ecological similarity of the species involved. However, the way in which environmental conditions and anthropogenic activity affect the relationship between spatial aggregation and ecological similarity remains unknown despite the potential for spatial associations to affect species interactions, ecosystem function, and extinction risk. Given that human disturbance has been shown to both increase and decrease spatial associations among species pairs, ecological similarity may have a role in mediating these patterns. Here, we test the influences of habitat diversity, primary productivity, human population density, and species' ecological similarity based on functional traits (i.e., functional trait similarity) on spatial associations among tropical forest mammals. Large mammals are highly sensitive to anthropogenic change and therefore susceptible to changes in interspecific spatial associations. Using two-species occupancy models and camera trap data, we quantified the spatial overlap of 1216 species pairs from 13 tropical forest protected areas around the world. We found that the association between ecological similarity and interspecific species associations depended on surrounding human density. Specifically, aggregation of ecologically similar species was more than an order of magnitude stronger in landscapes with the highest human density compared to those with the lowest human density, even though all populations occurred within protected areas. Human-induced changes in interspecific spatial associations have been shown to alter top-down control by predators, increase disease transmission and increase local extinction rates. Our results indicate that anthropogenic effects on the distribution of wildlife within protected areas are already occurring and that impacts on species interactions, ecosystem functions, and extinction risk warrant further investigation.
物种对之间的空间聚集通常随着所涉及物种的生态相似性增加而增加。然而,尽管空间关联有可能影响物种相互作用、生态系统功能和灭绝风险,但环境条件和人为活动如何影响空间聚集与生态相似性之间的关系仍然未知。鉴于人为干扰已被证明会增加和减少物种对之间的空间关联,生态相似性可能在调节这些模式方面发挥作用。在这里,我们根据功能特征(即功能特征相似性),测试了栖息地多样性、初级生产力、人口密度和物种生态相似性对热带森林哺乳动物之间空间关联的影响。大型哺乳动物对人为变化高度敏感,因此容易受到种间空间关联变化的影响。我们使用双物种占有模型和相机陷阱数据,量化了来自世界各地 13 个热带森林保护区的 1216 个物种对的空间重叠。我们发现,生态相似性与种间物种关联之间的关联取决于周围的人口密度。具体来说,与人口密度最低的景观相比,在人口密度最高的景观中,生态相似物种的聚集程度要强一个数量级以上,尽管所有种群都发生在保护区内。种间空间关联的人为变化已被证明会改变捕食者的自上而下的控制,增加疾病传播并增加局部灭绝率。我们的结果表明,人为因素对保护区内野生动物分布的影响已经在发生,对物种相互作用、生态系统功能和灭绝风险的影响值得进一步研究。