Simpson Dylan T
Grad Program in Ecology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
Negaunee Institute for Plant Science, Conservation, and Action, Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, IL, US.
Oecologia. 2025 May 29;207(6):93. doi: 10.1007/s00442-025-05721-4.
Effective population density and intergenerational dispersal distance are key aspects of population biology, but obtaining empirical estimates of these parameters can be difficult. This is especially true for my study taxa, wild bees. In this paper, I apply and evaluate an existing but underutilized method to estimate effective density and dispersal distance of bumble bees (Bombus, Apidae). Specifically, using 10 datasets of bumble bees in North America, I use the relationship between genetic isolation-by-distance and Wright's neighborhood size to define a density-dispersal isocline-that is, a curve describing pairs of density and dispersal values consistent with observed rates of isolation-by-distance. These parameters are inversely related; as one increases the other decreases. I then use outside estimates of bumble bee dispersal distances to make more specific estimates of effective colony density. Compared to some prior estimates of census density (100s to 1000s colonies/km), my estimated effective colony densities were very low (1-41 effective colonies/km). I also hypothesize, however, that these estimates are affected by the spatial extent of sampling, due to scale-dependent patterns in the distribution of individuals. To test this hypothesis, I subsampled each dataset to simulate varying study extent, and repeated my analysis. Within populations, effective densities tended to decrease when measured across larger spatial extents. Altogether, I demonstrate a useful and under-appreciated tool for studying population biology, especially of small, mobile animals like bees, but also show that researchers must interpret their results carefully within the context of their study design.
有效种群密度和代际扩散距离是种群生物学的关键方面,但要获得这些参数的实证估计可能很困难。对于我的研究类群——野生蜜蜂来说尤其如此。在本文中,我应用并评估了一种现有的但未充分利用的方法来估计熊蜂(膜翅目蜜蜂科)的有效密度和扩散距离。具体而言,利用北美10个熊蜂数据集,我利用遗传距离隔离与赖特邻域大小之间的关系来定义密度 - 扩散等斜线,即一条描述与观察到的距离隔离率一致的密度和扩散值对的曲线。这些参数呈负相关;一个增加,另一个就减少。然后,我利用熊蜂扩散距离的外部估计值对有效蜂群密度进行更具体的估计。与一些先前的普查密度估计值(每平方公里数百至数千个蜂群)相比,我估计的有效蜂群密度非常低(每平方公里1 - 41个有效蜂群)。然而,我也假设这些估计值受采样空间范围的影响,这是由于个体分布中存在尺度依赖模式。为了验证这一假设,我对每个数据集进行二次采样以模拟不同的研究范围,并重复我的分析。在种群内部,当在更大的空间范围内进行测量时,有效密度往往会降低。总之,我展示了一种用于研究种群生物学的有用且未得到充分重视的工具,特别是对于像蜜蜂这样小型、可移动的动物,但同时也表明研究人员必须在其研究设计的背景下仔细解释他们的结果。