Summers Jeremy, Cosgrove Elissa J, Bowman Reed, Fitzpatrick John W, Chen Nancy
bioRxiv. 2024 May 22:2024.01.10.575127. doi: 10.1101/2024.01.10.575127.
Isolation caused by anthropogenic habitat fragmentation can destabilize populations. Populations relying on the inflow of immigrants can face reduced fitness due to inbreeding depression as fewer new individuals arrive. Empirical studies of the demographic consequences of isolation are critical to understand how populations persist through changing conditions. We used a 34-year demographic and environmental dataset from a population of cooperatively-breeding Florida Scrub-Jays ( ) to create mechanistic models linking environmental and demographic factors to population growth rates. We found that the population has not declined despite both declining immigration and increasing inbreeding, owing to a coinciding response in breeder survival. We find evidence of density-dependent immigration, breeder survival, and fecundity, indicating that interactions between vital rates and local density play a role in buffering the population against change. Our study elucidates the impacts of isolation on demography and how long-term stability is maintained via demographic responses.
人为造成的栖息地破碎化所导致的隔离会使种群不稳定。依赖移民流入的种群可能会因近亲繁殖衰退而面临适应性下降,因为新个体的到来减少。对隔离的人口统计学后果进行实证研究对于理解种群如何在不断变化的条件下持续存在至关重要。我们使用了一个来自合作繁殖的佛罗里达灌丛鸦种群的34年人口统计学和环境数据集,以创建将环境和人口统计学因素与种群增长率联系起来的机制模型。我们发现,尽管移民减少和近亲繁殖增加,但由于繁殖者存活率的相应变化,该种群并未减少。我们发现了密度依赖的移民、繁殖者存活率和繁殖力的证据,这表明生命率与当地密度之间的相互作用在缓冲种群变化方面发挥了作用。我们的研究阐明了隔离对人口统计学的影响以及如何通过人口统计学反应维持长期稳定性。