Schaub Michael, Looft Volkher, Plard Floriane, von Rönn Jan A C
Swiss Ornithological Institute Sempach Switzerland.
Honigkamp 20 Postfeld Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Aug 1;14(8):e70058. doi: 10.1002/ece3.70058. eCollection 2024 Aug.
Population dynamics are driven by stochastic and density-dependent processes acting on demographic rates. Individuals differ demographically, and to capture these differences, models of population dynamics are usually structured by age and stage, rarely by sex. An effect of sex on population dynamics is expected if the dynamics of males and females differ, requiring an unequal sex ratio at birth and/or sex-specific survival probabilities. Goshawks () show large sexual size dimorphism and differential survival, but it is unknown whether males and females contribute differently to population dynamics. We studied a goshawk population in northern Germany over 47 years using brood monitoring data, collected feathers and nestling ringing data. We jointly analyzed the data using a two-sex integrated population model and performed retrospective and prospective population analyses to understand whether the demographic drivers of population change differ between the sexes. The population showed large fluctuations, during which the number of breeding pairs doubled, but the long-term trend of the population was slightly negative. Female survival exceeded male survival during the first year of life. Females started to reproduce at a younger age than males, productivity increased with female age, the sex ratio of nestlings was male biased and there was moderate male immigration. Despite these differences, temporal variation in sex ratio did not contribute to population dynamics and the contribution of temporal variation in survival was similar for both sexes. Variation in first-year survival was the strongest driver in this population, regulated by a weak density-dependent feedback acting through female first-year survival. Overall, the contributions of the two sexes to population dynamics were similar in this monogamous species with strong sexual size dimorphism.
种群动态受作用于人口统计学率的随机和密度依赖过程驱动。个体在人口统计学上存在差异,为了捕捉这些差异,种群动态模型通常按年龄和阶段构建,很少按性别构建。如果雄性和雌性的动态不同,即出生时性别比例不平等和/或具有性别特异性的生存概率,那么就可以预期性别对种群动态会产生影响。苍鹰()表现出较大的两性体型差异和不同的存活率,但雄性和雌性对种群动态的贡献是否不同尚不清楚。我们利用育雏监测数据、收集的羽毛和雏鸟环志数据,对德国北部的一个苍鹰种群进行了47年的研究。我们使用两性综合种群模型对数据进行联合分析,并进行回顾性和前瞻性种群分析,以了解种群变化的人口统计学驱动因素在性别之间是否存在差异。该种群呈现出大幅波动,在此期间繁殖对数量翻倍,但种群的长期趋势略有下降。在生命的第一年,雌性存活率超过雄性存活率。雌性比雄性开始繁殖的年龄更小,繁殖力随雌性年龄增加,雏鸟的性别比例偏向雄性,并且有适度的雄性迁入。尽管存在这些差异,但性别比例的时间变化对种群动态没有贡献,并且生存时间变化对两性的贡献相似。第一年存活率的变化是该种群中最强的驱动因素,由通过雌性第一年存活率起作用的弱密度依赖反馈调节。总体而言,在这个具有强烈两性体型差异的单配制物种中,两性对种群动态的贡献相似。