首页> 外文期刊>Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology >Foraging distribution of a tropical seabird supports Ashmole’s hypothesis of population regulation
【24h】

Foraging distribution of a tropical seabird supports Ashmole’s hypothesis of population regulation

机译:热带海鸟的觅食分布支持Ashmole的种群调控假说

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Many animals reproduce in large aggregations, which can vary in size from dozens to millions of individuals across species, time and space. The size of breeding colonies is a complex trade-off between multiple costs and benefits to an individual’s fitness, but the mechanisms by which colony size affects fitness are still poorly understood. One important cost of breeding in a large colony is the spatial constraint in resource use due to the need to regularly return to a central location. Large aggregations, like seabird breeding colonies, may therefore deplete food resources near the colony, forcing individuals to travel farther to find food, which may ultimately limit their reproductive output and population size. This hypothesis, proposed in 1963 by Ashmole for tropical oceanic islands, has so far not been tested at tropical seabird colonies, where food availability is less predictable than in colder waters. We compare the foraging distribution of a common tropical seabird, the masked booby Sula dactylatra, breeding on two islands in the South Atlantic that differ in the size of the breeding seabird community by 2 orders of magnitude, but are surrounded by similar oligotrophic waters. Foraging trips from the island with the smaller colony were on average 221 km (61 %) and 18.0 h (75 %) shorter because birds from the smaller colony rarely spent the night at sea and foraged on average 64 km (46 %) closer to the colony. Energy expenditure was significantly lower, and nest survival higher (47 vs. 37 %, n = 371) on the island with the smaller colony. These results are fully consistent with the predictions from Ashmole’s hypothesis and indicate that competition for food around tropical oceanic seabird colonies may indeed be a limiting factor for populations. Identifying important feeding areas for seabirds based on their foraging range may need to account for colony size of both the target and potential competitor species.
机译:许多动物都以大型聚集体繁殖,其大小可能因物种,时间和空间而异,从数十个到数百万个不等。繁殖种群的大小是在多种成本和个人适应度之间的复杂权衡,但是对种群大小影响适应性的机制仍知之甚少。在大殖民地中繁殖的一项重要成本是资源使用的空间限制,因为需要定期返回中心地带。因此,像海鸟繁殖殖民地这样的大型聚集体可能会耗尽该殖民地附近的粮食资源,迫使个人走得更远以寻找食物,这最终可能会限制他们的生殖产量和人口规模。这个假说由阿什莫勒(Ashmole)在1963年提出,用于热带海洋岛屿,迄今为止,尚未在热带海鸟殖民地进行过检验,因为那里的食物供应量比冷水要少。我们比较了一种常见的热带海鸟的觅食分布,它们是在南大西洋的两个岛屿上繁殖的,蒙面的诱杀的S鱼苏拉海藻(Sula dactylatra),它们的繁殖海鸟群落大小相差2个数量级,但被类似的贫营养水包围。由于殖民地较小的鸟类很少在海里过夜,并且在更近的地方平均觅食64 km(46%),因此来自殖民地较小的岛屿的觅食旅行平均缩短了221 km(61%)和18.0 h(75%)殖民地。在殖民地较小的岛屿上,能量消耗明显降低,巢生存率更高(47%vs. 37%,n = 371)。这些结果与阿什莫勒假说的预测完全一致,并表明热带海洋海鸟殖民地附近的食物竞争可能确实是人口的限制因素。根据觅食范围确定海鸟的重要觅食区域可能需要考虑目标物种和潜在竞争物种的种群大小。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号