Warret Rodrigues Chloé, Roth James D
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Manitoba, 50 Sifton Road, Winnipeg, MB, R3T 2N2, Canada.
Mov Ecol. 2023 Oct 2;11(1):60. doi: 10.1186/s40462-023-00421-1.
Range expansion of species, a major consequence of climate changes, may alter communities substantially due to competition between expanding and native species.
We first quantified size differences between an expanding habitat generalist, the red fox (Vulpes vulpes), and a circumpolar habitat specialist, the Arctic foxes (Vulpes lagopus), at the edge of the Arctic, where climate-related changes occur rapidly, to predict the likelihood of the larger competitor escalating interference to intraguild killing. We then used satellite telemetry to evaluate competition in a heterogeneous landscape by examining space use early during the foxes' reproductive period, when resource scarcity, increased-food requirements and spatial constraints likely exacerbate the potential for interference. We used time-LoCoH to quantify space and habitat use, and Minta's index to quantify spatio-temporal interactions between neighbors.
Our morphometric comparison involving 236 foxes found that the potential for escalated interference between these species was high due to intermediate size difference. However, our results from 17 collared foxes suggested that expanding and native competitors may coexist when expanding species occur at low densities. Low home-range overlap between neighbors suggested territoriality and substantial exploitation competition for space. No obvious differential use of areas shared by heterospecific neighbors suggested low interference. If anything, intraspecific competition between red foxes may be stronger than interspecific competition. Red and Arctic foxes used habitat differentially, with near-exclusive use of forest patches by red foxes and marine habitats by Arctic foxes.
Heterogeneous landscapes may relax interspecific competition between expanding and native species, allowing exclusive use of some resources. Furthermore, the scarcity of habitats favored by expanding species may emphasize intraspecific competition between newcomers over interspecific competition, thus creating the potential for self-limitation of expanding populations. Dominant expanding competitors may benefit from interference, but usually lack adaptations to abiotic conditions at their expansion front, favoring rear-edge subordinate species in exploitation competition. However, due to ongoing climate change, systems are usually not at equilibrium. A spread of habitats and resources favorable to expanding species may promote higher densities of antagonistically dominant newcomers, which may lead to extirpation of native species.
物种范围扩张是气候变化的一个主要后果,由于扩张物种与本地物种之间的竞争,可能会极大地改变群落。
我们首先在北极边缘地区(这里与气候相关的变化迅速发生),量化了扩张的栖息地泛化种赤狐(Vulpes vulpes)和环北极栖息地特化种北极狐(Vulpes lagopus)之间的体型差异,以预测体型较大的竞争者升级为种内互残性干扰的可能性。然后,我们使用卫星遥测技术,通过在狐狸繁殖期早期检查空间利用情况,来评估异质景观中的竞争,此时资源稀缺、食物需求增加和空间限制可能会加剧干扰的可能性。我们使用时间局部凸包法(time-LoCoH)来量化空间和栖息地利用情况,并使用明塔指数(Minta's index)来量化邻居之间的时空相互作用。
我们对236只狐狸进行的形态测量比较发现,由于体型差异适中,这些物种之间升级干扰的可能性很高。然而,我们对17只佩戴项圈狐狸的研究结果表明,当扩张物种密度较低时,扩张物种和本地竞争者可能共存。邻居之间较低的家域重叠表明存在领地行为和对空间的大量剥削性竞争。没有明显证据表明异种种群对共享区域存在差异利用,这表明干扰较低。如果有什么不同的话,赤狐之间的种内竞争可能比种间竞争更强。赤狐和北极狐对栖息地的利用存在差异,赤狐几乎只使用森林斑块,而北极狐则使用海洋栖息地。
异质景观可能会缓解扩张物种与本地物种之间的种间竞争,使得一些资源得以被独占利用。此外,扩张物种所偏好的栖息地稀缺,可能会使新来者之间的种内竞争比种间竞争更为突出,从而为扩张种群的自我限制创造了可能性。占主导地位的扩张竞争者可能会从干扰中受益,但通常缺乏对其扩张前沿非生物条件的适应性,这有利于后缘的从属物种在剥削性竞争中占据优势。然而,由于气候变化持续存在,生态系统通常并不处于平衡状态。有利于扩张物种的栖息地和资源扩散,可能会促使具有对抗性优势的新来者密度增加,这可能导致本地物种灭绝。