Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia.
J Anim Ecol. 2024 Nov;93(11):1670-1683. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14177. Epub 2024 Sep 17.
Metapopulations often exist in a fragile balance between local extinctions and (re)colonisations, in which case emerging threats that alter species vital rates may drastically increase metapopulation extinction risk. We combined empirical data with metapopulation simulations to examine how demographic shifts associated with amphibian chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, Bd) have altered metapopulation viability for threatened amphibians in Australia. Comparing the ages of museum specimens collected before Bd emerged in Australia with individuals from geographically matched remnant populations revealed significant truncation of age structures post-Bd, with a halving of annual adult survival probabilities. Spatially realistic metapopulation modelling demonstrated that reduced adult survival led to major reductions in the parameter space over which persistence was possible for the focal species, with contractions to landscapes with higher landscape connectivity, lower environmental stochasticity and considerably higher recruitment rates. Metapopulation persistence post-Bd required greater landscape connectivity than pre-Bd. This arises from a landscape-level analogue of compensatory recruitment at the population level, in which higher (re)colonisation rates can offset more frequent local extinctions, enabling persistence of amphibians susceptible to Bd. Interactions between recruitment rate, environmental stochasticity and landscape connectivity were also more important for metapopulation persistence post-Bd. Higher recruitment was required to mitigate the impacts of environmental stochasticity, and higher landscape connectivity was required to mitigate the impacts of environmental stochasticity and poor recruitment. Increased reliance on these interdependencies shrunk the parameter space over which metapopulations could persist post-Bd. Our study demonstrates that emerging threats that alter species vital rates can drastically reduce the capacity of certain environments to support metapopulations. For our focal species, reductions in adult survival rates due to Bd produced major reductions in the conditions under which persistence was possible, providing a mechanistic insight into the processes underpinning observed range and niche contractions of amphibians impacted by this pathogen. More broadly, our study illustrates how environmentally mediated host resilience can enable persistence following the emergence of novel pathogens. This pathway to persistence is worthy of greater attention on both conceptual and applied grounds.
复合种群通常处于局部灭绝和(再)殖民之间的脆弱平衡之中,在这种情况下,改变物种关键生活史参数的新兴威胁可能会极大地增加复合种群灭绝的风险。我们结合了实证数据和复合种群模拟,以研究与两栖动物壶菌(Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis,Bd)相关的种群动态变化如何改变了澳大利亚受威胁的两栖动物的复合种群生存能力。将博物馆标本采集的年龄与地理匹配的残余种群个体进行比较,发现 Bd 在澳大利亚出现后,年龄结构显著缩短,每年成年个体的存活率降低了一半。具有现实空间分布的复合种群模型表明,成年个体存活率降低导致焦点物种在可能生存的参数空间中发生了重大变化,其收缩到具有更高景观连通性、更低环境随机性和更高招募率的景观中。Bd 后复合种群的生存需要比 Bd 前更大的景观连通性。这是由于种群水平上的补偿性再定居在景观水平上的类似现象,即更高的(再)殖民化率可以抵消更频繁的局部灭绝,从而使易受 Bd 影响的两栖动物得以生存。Bd 后,招募率、环境随机性和景观连通性之间的相互作用对复合种群的生存也更为重要。更高的招募率可以减轻环境随机性的影响,而更高的景观连通性则可以减轻环境随机性和低招募率的影响。对这些相互依赖关系的依赖程度增加缩小了 Bd 后复合种群可以生存的参数空间。我们的研究表明,改变物种关键生活史参数的新兴威胁可以极大地降低某些环境支持复合种群的能力。对于我们的焦点物种,由于 Bd 导致的成年个体存活率降低,使得能够生存的条件发生了重大变化,为观察到的受这种病原体影响的两栖动物的范围和生态位收缩提供了机制上的见解。更广泛地说,我们的研究说明了环境介导的宿主弹性如何在新型病原体出现后使物种得以生存。这种生存途径在概念和应用方面都值得更多关注。