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首页> 外文期刊>Ecography >Integrating physiology, population dynamics and climate to make multi-scale predictions for the spread of an invasive insect: the Argentine ant at Haleakala National Park, Hawaii
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Integrating physiology, population dynamics and climate to make multi-scale predictions for the spread of an invasive insect: the Argentine ant at Haleakala National Park, Hawaii

机译:结合生理,种群动态和气候,对入侵昆虫的传播做出多尺度预测:夏威夷哈莱阿卡拉国家公园的阿根廷蚂蚁

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摘要

Mechanistic models for predicting species’ distribution patterns present particular advantages and challenges relative to models developed from statistical correlations between distribution and climate. They can be especially useful for predicting the range of invasive species whose distribution has not yet reached equilibrium. Here, we illustrate how a physiological model of development for the invasive Argentine ant can be connected to differences in micro-site suitability, population dynamics and climatic gradients; processes operating at quite different spatial scales. Our study is located in the subalpine shrubland of Haleakala National Park, Hawaii, where the spread of Argentine ants Linepithema humile has been documented for the past twenty-five years. We report four main results. First, at a microsite level, the accumulation of degree-days recorded in potential ant nest sites under bare ground or rocks was significantly greater than under a groundcover of grassy vegetation. Second, annual degree-days measured where population boundaries have not expanded (456521 degree-days), were just above the developmental requirements identified from earlier laboratory studies (445 degree-days above 15.98C). Third, rates of population expansion showed a strong linear relationship with annual degree-days. Finally, an empirical relationship between soil degree-days and climate variables mapped at a broader scale predicts the potential for future range expansion of Argentine ants at Haleakala, particularly to the west of the lower colony and the east of the upper colony. Variation in the availability of suitable microsites, driven by changes in vegetation cover and ultimately climate, provide a hierarchical understanding of the distribution of Argentine ants close to their cold-wet limit of climatic tolerances. We conclude that the integration of physiology, population dynamics and climate mapping holds much promise for making more robust predictions about the potential spread of invasive species.
机译:与根据分布和气候之间的统计相关性开发的模型相比,用于预测物种分布模式的机械模型具有特殊的优势和挑战。它们对于预测分布尚未达到平衡的入侵物种的范围尤其有用。在这里,我们说明了入侵阿根廷蚂蚁发育的生理模型如何与微观场所适应性,种群动态和气候梯度的差异联系起来;在完全不同的空间尺度上运行的过程。我们的研究位于夏威夷Haleakala国家公园的亚高山灌木丛中,过去25年中,阿根廷蚂蚁Linepithema humile的传播已被记录下来。我们报告了四个主要结果。首先,在微观站点水平上,裸露的地面或岩石下潜在蚂蚁窝站点记录的度日累积明显大于草木植被的地面覆盖下。其次,在人口边界没有扩大的情况下测得的年度日数(456521度日)正好高于早期实验室研究确定的发展要求(15.98C以上的度数445日)。第三,人口膨胀率与年度日数呈强线性关系。最后,土壤度数-天数与更广泛映射的气候变量之间的经验关系预测了哈雷阿卡拉的阿根廷蚂蚁未来范围扩大的潜力,特别是在下殖民地以西和上殖民地以东。由植被覆盖率的变化以及最终气候的变化驱动的合适的微型站点的可用性变化,使人们对阿根廷蚂蚁的分布接近于气候承受能力的冷湿极限提供了层次的理解。我们得出的结论是,将生理学,种群动态和气候图谱整合在一起,可以对入侵物种的潜在传播做出更可靠的预测。

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