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首页> 外文期刊>Progress in Oceanography >Can schooling regulate marine populations and ecosystems?
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Can schooling regulate marine populations and ecosystems?

机译:学校教育可以调节海洋人口和生态系统吗?

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Schools, shoals and swarms are pervasive in the oceans. They have to provide very strong advantages to have been selected and generalized in the course of evolution. Auto-organized groups are usually assumed to provide facilitated encounters of reproduction partners, improved protection against predation, better foraging efficiency, and hydrodynamic gains. However, present theories regarding their evolutionary advantages do not provide an unambiguous explanation to their universality. In particular, the mechanisms commonly proposed to explain grouping provide little support to the formation of very large groups that are common in the sea (e.g. Rieucau et al., 2014). From literature review, data analysis and using a simple mathematical model, I show that large auto-organized groups appear at high population density while only small groups or dispersed individuals remain at low population density. Following, an analysis of tuna tagging data and simple theoretical developments show that large groups are likely to expose individuals to a dramatic decrease of individual foraging success and simultaneous increase of predatory and disease mortality, while small groups avoid those adverse feedbacks and provide maximum foraging success and protection against predation, as it is usually assumed. This would create an emergent density-dependent regulation of marine populations, preventing them from outbursts at high density, and protecting them at low density. This would be a major contribution to their resilience and a crucial process of ecosystems dynamics. A two-step evolutionary process acting at the individual level is proposed to explain how this apparently suicidal behaviour could have been selected and generalized. It explains how grouping would have permitted the emergence of extremely high fecundity life histories, despite their notorious propensity to destabilize populations. The potential implications of the "grouping feedback" on population resilience, ecosystem stability and the persistence of marine biodiversity are discussed. The risk of harvesting marine species with fishing gears that enable catching dispersed individuals (such as longline, gillnet, trawl or using fishing aggregative devices for instance) is underlined. Finally, tropical tunas are used to exemplify the potential importance of schooling in shaping complex life histories and species interaction. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
机译:学校,浅滩和蜂群在海洋中无处不在。它们必须提供非常强大的优势,以便在进化过程中进行选择和推广。通常认为,自动组织的团体可以提供繁殖伙伴的便利相遇,更好的防捕食能力,更好的觅食效率和水动力收益。但是,有关其进化优势的当前理论并未对其普遍性提供明确的解释。特别是,通常提出的解释分组的机制几乎不支持在海洋中形成非常大的群体(例如Rieucau等人,2014)。通过文献综述,数据分析和使用简单的数学模型,我表明,大型的自组织群体以较高的人口密度出现,而只有少数群体或分散的个体保持较低的人口密度。随后,对金枪鱼标签数据的分析和简单的理论发展表明,大型群体很可能使个体暴露于个体觅食成功的急剧下降以及掠食性疾病和疾病死亡率的同时增加,而小型群体则避免了这些不利反馈并提供了最大的觅食成功和通常所说的防止掠食。这将对海洋种群产生依赖于密度的紧急调节,防止它们在高密度下爆发,并在低密度下保护它们。这将对它们的复原力和生态系统动态的关键过程做出重大贡献。提出了一个在个人层面上起作用的两步进化过程,以解释如何选择和推广这种表面上的自杀行为。它解释了尽管有众所周知的破坏人口稳定的倾向,但是分组将如何允许极高的繁殖力生活史的出现。讨论了“分组反馈”对人口复原力,生态系统稳定性和海洋生物多样性持久性的潜在影响。着重强调了使用能使散落的个体(例如延绳钓,刺网,拖网或使用捕捞聚集装置)捕获的渔具捕捞海洋物种的风险。最后,热带金枪鱼被用来说明学校教育在塑造复杂的生活史和物种相互作用方面的潜在重要性。 (C)2017 Elsevier Ltd.保留所有权利。

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