Department of Wildland Resources and Ecology Center, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA.
Yellowstone Center for Resources, National Park Service, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2023 Feb;26(2):245-256. doi: 10.1111/ele.14155. Epub 2022 Dec 26.
Although it is well established that density dependence drives changes in organismal abundance over time, relatively little is known about how density dependence affects variation in abundance over space. We tested the hypothesis that spatial trade-offs between food and safety can change the drivers of population distribution, caused by opposing patterns of density-dependent habitat selection (DDHS) that are predicted by the multidimensional ideal free distribution. We addressed this using winter aerial survey data of northern Yellowstone elk (Cervus canadensis) spanning four decades. Supporting our hypothesis, we found positive DDHS for food (herbaceous biomass) and negative DDHS for safety (openness and roughness), such that the primary driver of habitat selection switched from food to safety as elk density decreased from 9.3 to 2.0 elk/km . Our results demonstrate how population density can drive landscape-level shifts in population distribution, confounding habitat selection inference and prediction and potentially affecting community-level interactions.
尽管密度制约因素会随着时间的推移而导致生物个体丰度发生变化这一点已经得到充分证实,但关于密度制约因素如何影响生物丰度在空间上的变化,我们知之甚少。我们检验了这样一个假设,即食物和安全之间的空间权衡会改变种群分布的驱动因素,这是由多维理想自由分布所预测的、相反的密度制约性生境选择(DDHS)模式造成的。我们使用跨越四个十年的北黄石地区麋鹿(Cervus canadensis)冬季空中调查数据来解决这个问题。支持我们假设的是,我们发现食物(草本生物量)存在正的 DDHS,而安全(开阔度和粗糙度)存在负的 DDHS,因此,随着麋鹿密度从 9.3 头/平方公里下降到 2.0 头/平方公里,生境选择的主要驱动因素从食物转变为安全。我们的研究结果表明,种群密度如何驱动景观水平上的种群分布变化,从而混淆了对生境选择的推断和预测,并可能影响群落水平上的相互作用。