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首页> 外文期刊>Ecology and Evolution >Competition for safe real estate, not food, drives density‐dependent juvenile survival in a large herbivore
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Competition for safe real estate, not food, drives density‐dependent juvenile survival in a large herbivore

机译:安全房地产的竞争,而不是食物,在大型食草动物中推动密集依赖的少年存活

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摘要

Density‐dependent competition for food reduces vital rates, with juvenile survival often the first to decline. A clear prediction of food‐based, density‐dependent competition for large herbivores is decreasing juvenile survival with increasing density. However, competition for enemy‐free space could also be a significant mechanism for density dependence in territorial species. How juvenile survival is predicted to change across density depends critically on the nature of predator–prey dynamics and spatial overlap among predator and prey, especially in multiple‐predator systems. Here, we used a management experiment that reduced densities of a generalist predator, coyotes, and specialist predator, mountain lions, over a 5‐year period to test for spatial density dependence mediated by predation on juvenile mule deer in Idaho, USA. We tested the spatial density‐dependence hypothesis by tracking the fate of 251 juvenile mule deer, estimating cause‐specific mortality, and testing responses to changes in deer density and predator abundance. Overall juvenile mortality did not increase with deer density, but generalist coyote‐caused mortality did, but not when coyote density was reduced experimentally. Mountain lion‐caused mortality did not change with deer density in the reference area in contradiction of the food‐based competition hypothesis, but declined in the treatment area, opposite to the pattern of coyotes. These observations clearly reject the food‐based density‐dependence hypothesis for juvenile mule deer. Instead, our results provide support for the spatial density‐dependence hypothesis that competition for enemy‐free space increases predation by generalist predators on juvenile large herbivores.
机译:依赖于密度的食物竞争降低了重要率,少年生存往往是第一个下降。对大型食草动物的基于食物的基于密度依赖性竞争的清晰预测正在随着密度的增加而降低少年存活。然而,对敌方空间的竞争也可能是在领土物种中的密度依赖性的重要机制。预测少年存活率如何跨密度改变尺寸依赖于捕食者 - 猎物动态和捕食者和猎物之间的空间重叠的性质,特别是在多捕食系统中。在这里,我们使用了一项管理实验,即减少了一般主义捕食者,土狼和专科捕食者,山狮,在5年期间探讨了在美国爱达荷州少年骡鹿的少年骡鹿介导的空间密度依赖性测试的5年期。我们通过跟踪251少年骡鹿,估计原因特异性死亡率和测试鹿密度和捕食者丰度的变化的响应来测试空间密度依赖性假设。整体少年死亡率与鹿密度没有增加,但通用土狼引起的死亡率,但是当实验上降低了土狼的密度时也没有。山狮引起的死亡率在基于食物的竞争假设的矛盾中,鹿密度没有改变参考领域,但在治疗区域均下降,与土狼的模式相反。这些观察结果明显抑制了少年骡鹿的基于食物的密度依赖性假设。相反,我们的结果提供了对空间密度依赖性假设的支持,即敌方的空间竞争通过少年大型食草动物上的通用捕食者增加了捕食。

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