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小型啮齿动物的种群周期

Population cycles in small rodents.

作者信息

Krebs C J, Gaines M S, Keller B L, Myers J H, Tamarin R H

出版信息

Science. 1973 Jan 5;179(4068):35-41. doi: 10.1126/science.179.4068.35.

Abstract

We conclude that population fluctuations in Microtus in southern Indiana are produced by a syndrome of changes in birth and death rates similar to that found in other species of voles and lemmings. The mechanisms which cause the changes in birth and death rates are demolished by fencing the population so that no dispersal can occur. Dispersal thus seems critical for population regulation in Microtus. Because most dispersal occurs during the increase phase of the population cycle and there is little dispersal during the decline phase, dispersal is not directly related to population density. Hence the quality of dispersing animals must be important, and we have found one case of increased dispersal tendency by one genotype. The failure of population regulation of Microtus in enclosed areas requires an explanation by any hypothesis attempting to explain population cycles in small rodents. It might be suggested that the fence changed the predation pressure on the enclosed populations. However, the fence was only 2 feet (0.6 meter) high and did not stop the entrance of foxes, weasels, shrews, or avian predators. A striking feature was that the habitat in the enclosures quickly recovered from complete devastation by the start of the spring growing season. Obviously the habitat and food quality were sufficient to support Microtus populations of abnormally high densities, and recovery of the habitat was sufficiently quick that the introduction of new animals to these enclosed areas resulted in another population explosion. Finally, hypotheses of population regulation by social stress must account for the finding that Microtus can exist at densities several times greater than normal without "stress" taking an obvious toll. We hypothesize that the prevention of dispersal changes the quality of the populations in the enclosures in comparison to those outside the fence. Voles forced to remain in an overcrowded fenced population do not suffer high mortality rates and continue to reproduce at abnormally high densities until starvation overtakes them. The initial behavioral interactions associated with crowding do not seem sufficient to cause voles to die in situ. What happens to animals during the population decline? Our studies have not answered this question. The animals did not appear to disperse, but it is possible that the method we used to measure dispersal (movement into a vacant habitat) missed a large segment of dispersing voles which did not remain in the vacant area but kept on moving. Perhaps the dispersal during the increase phase of the population cycle is a colonization type of dispersal, and the animals taking part in it are likely to stay in a new habitat, while during the population decline dispersal is a pathological response to high density, and the animals are not attracted to settling even in a vacant habitat. The alternative to this suggestion is that animals are dying in situ during the decline because of physiological or genetically determined behavioral stress. Thus the fencing of a population prevents the change in rates of survival and reproduction, from high rates in the increase phase to low rates in the decline phase, and the fenced populations resemble "mouse plagues." A possible explanation is that the differential dispersal of animals during the phase of increase causes the quality of the voles remaining at peak densities in wild populations to be different from the quality of voles at much higher densities in enclosures. Increased sensitivity to density in Microtus could cause the decline of wild populations at densities lower than those reached by fenced populations in which selection through dispersal has been prevented. Fencing might also alter the social interactions among Microtus in other ways that are not understood. The analysis of colonizing species by MacArthur and Wilson (27) can be applied to our studies of dispersal in populations of Microtus. Groups of organisms with good dispersal and colonizing ability are called r strategists because they have high reproductive potential and are able to exploit a new environment rapidly. Dispersing voles seem to be r strategists. Young females in breeding condition were over-represented in dispersing female Microtus (17). The Tf(C)/Tf(E) females, which were more common among dispersers during the phase of population increase (Fig. 6), also have a slight reproductive advantage over the other Tf genotypes (19). Thus in Microtus populations the animals with the highest reproductive potential, the r strategists, are dispersing. The segment of the population which remains behind after the selection-via-dispersal are those individuals which are less influenced by increasing population densities. These are the individuals which maximize use of the habitat, the K strategists in MacArthur and Wilson's terminology, or voles selected for spacing behavior. Thus we can describe population cycles in Microtus in the same theoretical framework as colonizing species on islands. Our work on Microtus is consistent with the hypothesis of genetic and behavioral effects proposed by Chitty (6) (Fig. 7) in that it shows both behavioral differences in males during the phases of population fluctuation and periods of strong genetic selection. The greatest gaps in our knowledge are in the area of genetic-behavioral interactions which are most difficult to measure. We have no information on the heritability of aggressive behavior in voles. The pathways by which behavioral events are translated into physiological changes which affect reproduction and growth have been carefully analyzed by Christian and his associates (28) for rodents in laboratory situations, but the application of these findings to the complex field events described above remains to be done. Several experiments are suggested by our work. First, other populations of other rodent species should increase to abnormal densities if enclosed in a large fenced area (29). We need to find situations in which this prediction is not fulfilled. Island populations may be an important source of material for such an experiment (30). Second, if one-way exit doors were provided from a fenced area, normal population regulation through dispersal should occur. This experiment would provide another method by which dispersers could be identified. Third, if dispersal were prevented after a population reached peak densities, a normal decline phase should occur. This prediction is based on the assumption that dispersal during the increase phase is sufficient to ensure the decline phase 1 or 2 years later. All these experiments are concerned with the dispersal factor, and our work on Microtus can be summarized by the admonition: study dispersal.

摘要

我们得出结论,印第安纳州南部田鼠种群的波动是由出生率和死亡率的一系列变化引起的,这与在其他田鼠和旅鼠物种中发现的情况类似。通过将种群围起来以阻止扩散,导致出生率和死亡率变化的机制被消除了。因此,扩散似乎对田鼠种群的调节至关重要。由于大多数扩散发生在种群周期的增长阶段,而在下降阶段扩散很少,所以扩散与种群密度没有直接关系。因此,扩散个体的质量一定很重要,我们发现了一个基因型扩散倾向增加的案例。任何试图解释小型啮齿动物种群周期的假设都需要解释封闭区域内田鼠种群调节失败的原因。有人可能会提出,围栏改变了对封闭种群的捕食压力。然而,围栏只有2英尺(0.6米)高,并没有阻止狐狸、黄鼠狼、鼩鼱或鸟类捕食者进入。一个显著的特点是,围栏内的栖息地在春季生长季节开始时迅速从完全破坏中恢复过来。显然,栖息地和食物质量足以支持异常高密度的田鼠种群,而且栖息地的恢复足够快,以至于将新动物引入这些封闭区域会导致另一次种群爆炸。最后,关于社会压力调节种群的假设必须解释这样一个发现,即田鼠能够以比正常密度高出几倍的密度生存,而“压力”并没有明显的影响。我们假设,与围栏外的种群相比,阻止扩散会改变围栏内种群的质量。被迫留在过度拥挤的围栏种群中的田鼠不会有高死亡率,并且会继续以异常高的密度繁殖,直到饥饿降临。与拥挤相关的最初行为相互作用似乎不足以导致田鼠在原地死亡。在种群下降期间动物会发生什么?我们的研究没有回答这个问题。动物似乎没有扩散,但有可能我们用来测量扩散的方法(进入空置栖息地的移动)遗漏了很大一部分扩散的田鼠,它们没有留在空置区域而是继续移动。也许在种群周期增长阶段的扩散是一种殖民化类型的扩散,参与其中的动物可能会留在新的栖息地,而在种群下降期间的扩散是对高密度的一种病理反应,动物甚至不会被吸引到空置栖息地定居。这个建议的另一种可能性是,在下降期间动物由于生理或基因决定的行为压力而在原地死亡。因此,对种群进行围栏阻止了生存率和繁殖率从增长阶段的高比率到下降阶段的低比率的变化,围栏内的种群类似于“鼠灾”。一个可能的解释是,在增长阶段动物的差异扩散导致野生种群中处于峰值密度的田鼠质量与围栏内密度高得多的田鼠质量不同。田鼠对密度的敏感性增加可能导致野生种群在低于围栏种群所达到的密度时就开始下降,在围栏种群中通过扩散进行的选择被阻止了。围栏也可能以其他不为人知的方式改变田鼠之间的社会相互作用。MacArthur和Wilson(27)对殖民化物种的分析可以应用于我们对田鼠种群扩散的研究。具有良好扩散和殖民化能力的生物群体被称为r策略者,因为它们具有高繁殖潜力,能够迅速利用新环境。扩散的田鼠似乎是r策略者。处于繁殖状态的年轻雌性在扩散的雌性田鼠中占比过高(17)。在种群增长阶段,Tf(C)/Tf(E)雌性在扩散者中更为常见(图6),它们也比其他Tf基因型具有轻微的繁殖优势(19)。因此,在田鼠种群中,具有最高繁殖潜力的动物,即r策略者,正在扩散。通过扩散进行选择后留下的种群部分是那些受种群密度增加影响较小的个体。这些是那些最大限度利用栖息地的个体,用MacArthur和Wilson的术语来说就是K策略者,或者是被选择用于空间行为的田鼠。因此,我们可以在与岛屿上殖民化物种相同的理论框架内描述田鼠的种群周期。我们对田鼠的研究与Chitty(6)提出的遗传和行为效应假设一致(图7),因为它显示了在种群波动阶段雄性的行为差异以及强烈的遗传选择时期。我们知识中最大的空白在于最难以测量的遗传 - 行为相互作用领域。我们没有关于田鼠攻击行为遗传力的信息。Christian及其同事(28)在实验室情况下对啮齿动物仔细分析了行为事件转化为影响繁殖和生长的生理变化的途径,但将这些发现应用于上述复杂的野外事件仍有待完成。我们的工作提出了几个实验。首先,如果将其他啮齿动物物种的其他种群封闭在一个大的围栏区域内(29),它们应该会增加到异常密度。我们需要找到这种预测不成立的情况。岛屿种群可能是进行此类实验的重要材料来源(30)。其次,如果从围栏区域设置单向出口门,应该会通过扩散实现正常的种群调节。这个实验将提供另一种识别扩散者的方法。第三,如果在种群达到峰值密度后阻止扩散,应该会出现正常的下降阶段。这个预测基于这样的假设,即在增长阶段的扩散足以确保一两年后的下降阶段。所有这些实验都与扩散因素有关,我们对田鼠的研究可以用这句告诫来总结:研究扩散。

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