Université de Strasbourg, CNRS, IPHC UMR 7178, F-67000, Strasbourg, France.
Department of Biological Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, 36849, AL, USA.
Oecologia. 2024 Aug;205(3-4):497-513. doi: 10.1007/s00442-024-05583-2. Epub 2024 Jul 9.
Demography of herbivorous mammal populations may be affected by changes in predation, population density, harvesting, and climate. Whereas numerous studies have focused on the effect of single environmental variables on individual demographic processes, attempts to integrate the consequences of several environmental variables on numerous functional traits and demographic rates are rare. Over a 32-year period, we examined how forage availability (vegetation assessed through NDVI) and population density affected the functional traits and demographic rates of a population of Columbian ground squirrels (Urocitellus columbianus), a herbivorous hibernating rodent. We focused on mean population phenology, body mass, breeding success, and survival. We found a negative effect of population density on demographic rates, including on breeding success and pup and adult survival to the next year. We found diverging effects of vegetation phenology on demographic rates: positive effects of a later start of the growing season on adult and yearling female survival, and juvenile survival, but no clear effect on male survival. Interestingly, neither population density nor vegetation affected population phenology or body condition in the following year. Vegetative growth rate had a positive influence on female mass gain (somatic investment) over a season, but both vegetative growth rate and biomass, surprisingly, had negative effects on the survival of young through their first hibernation. Thus, ground squirrels appeared to benefit more from later timing of vegetation than increases in vegetative biomass per se. Our study provides evidence for complex ecological effects of vegetation and population density on functional traits and demographic rates of small mammal populations.
食草哺乳动物的种群动态可能受到捕食、种群密度、收获和气候的变化的影响。虽然许多研究都集中在单一环境变量对个体生命过程的影响上,但很少有尝试将几种环境变量对众多功能特征和生命特征的影响整合起来。在 32 年的时间里,我们研究了食物供应(通过 NDVI 评估的植被)和种群密度如何影响哥伦比亚地松鼠(Urocitellus columbianus)的功能特征和生命特征,这是一种食草性的冬眠啮齿动物。我们关注的是种群物候学、体重、繁殖成功率和存活率的平均水平。我们发现种群密度对生命特征,包括繁殖成功率和幼仔及成年个体次年的存活率有负面影响。我们发现植被物候学对生命特征有不同的影响:生长季节开始较晚对成年和年轻雌性的存活以及幼仔的存活有积极影响,但对雄性的存活没有明显影响。有趣的是,无论是种群密度还是植被,都没有影响次年的种群物候或身体状况。植被生长率对雌性在一个季节的体重增加(身体投资)有积极影响,但令人惊讶的是,植被生长率和生物量都对幼仔在第一次冬眠期间的存活有负面影响。因此,地松鼠似乎从植被时间上的延迟中受益更多,而不是植被生物量本身的增加。我们的研究为植被和种群密度对小型哺乳动物种群的功能特征和生命特征的复杂生态影响提供了证据。