A general, resource-based explanation for density dependence in populations of large herbivores

IF 7.1 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecological Monographs Pub Date : 2024-03-05 DOI:10.1002/ecm.1600
N. Thompson Hobbs
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Abstract

The discipline of ecology seeks to understand how ecosystems, communities, and populations are regulated. A ubiquitous mechanism of population regulation of consumers is that capturing energy and nutrients in sufficient quantities for survival and reproduction becomes more difficult as population density increases. Extensive evidence has revealed that populations of large herbivores are often regulated by density dependence, defined as the reduction in the per-capita population growth rate that occurs as populations grow large. Diminished body mass of individuals has been repeatedly observed in high-density populations, implicating compromised nutrition as the primary cause of density dependence. However, there is no general explanation for why these nutritional deficiencies occur. Recent work demonstrated that reduced food intake rates resulting from the functional response of herbivores to depleted plant biomass does not provide a sensible explanation for density dependence because rates of food intake of herbivores are often insensitive to changes in plant biomass. A new model of feedbacks from plant biomass to herbivores shows how reduced nutrition of herbivores can result from increased dilution of nutrients in the plant tissue they consume as populations grow, even when their rate of consumption of plants remains constant. The model contains parameters that can be scaled to body mass, allowing unusually general predictions. The model shows that convex, concave, and linear relationships between the per-capita growth rate and population density can arise from the effects of depletion of plant biomass by herbivore foraging. The model is the first to explicitly include spatial variance in the nutritional quality of plants as a general driver of herbivore population dynamics. I show how regulation of herbivore abundance by plant nutrients can occur, even when a large fraction of the consumable plant biomass remains uneaten, providing a simple, mechanistic explanation for bottom-up control of population dynamics of primary consumers in a “green world.”

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基于资源的大型食草动物种群密度依赖性的一般解释
生态学这门学科旨在了解生态系统、群落和种群是如何调节的。消费者种群调节的一个普遍机制是,随着种群密度的增加,捕获足够数量的能量和养分以维持生存和繁殖变得更加困难。大量证据表明,大型食草动物的种群通常受到密度依赖性的调节,密度依赖性是指随着种群数量的增加,人均种群增长率降低。在高密度种群中多次观察到个体体重减轻的现象,这表明营养受损是密度依赖性的主要原因。然而,对于为什么会出现这些营养缺乏症,目前还没有普遍的解释。最近的研究表明,食草动物对植物生物量减少的功能性反应导致的食物摄取率降低并不能合理解释密度依赖性,因为食草动物的食物摄取率通常对植物生物量的变化不敏感。一个从植物生物量到食草动物的新反馈模型表明,即使食草动物消耗植物的速度保持不变,随着种群数量的增加,它们所消耗的植物组织中营养物质的稀释程度增加,也会导致食草动物营养减少。该模型包含的参数可与体重成比例关系,从而可进行异常普遍的预测。该模型表明,人均增长率与种群密度之间可能存在凸、凹和线性关系,这是因为食草动物觅食会消耗植物生物量。该模型首次明确将植物营养质量的空间差异作为食草动物种群动态的一般驱动因素。我展示了植物养分如何调节食草动物的丰度,即使很大一部分可食用的植物生物量仍未被吃掉,这为 "绿色世界 "中初级消费者种群动态自下而上的控制提供了一个简单的机制解释。
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来源期刊
Ecological Monographs
Ecological Monographs 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
12.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
61
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The vision for Ecological Monographs is that it should be the place for publishing integrative, synthetic papers that elaborate new directions for the field of ecology. Original Research Papers published in Ecological Monographs will continue to document complex observational, experimental, or theoretical studies that by their very integrated nature defy dissolution into shorter publications focused on a single topic or message. Reviews will be comprehensive and synthetic papers that establish new benchmarks in the field, define directions for future research, contribute to fundamental understanding of ecological principles, and derive principles for ecological management in its broadest sense (including, but not limited to: conservation, mitigation, restoration, and pro-active protection of the environment). Reviews should reflect the full development of a topic and encompass relevant natural history, observational and experimental data, analyses, models, and theory. Reviews published in Ecological Monographs should further blur the boundaries between “basic” and “applied” ecology. Concepts and Synthesis papers will conceptually advance the field of ecology. These papers are expected to go well beyond works being reviewed and include discussion of new directions, new syntheses, and resolutions of old questions. In this world of rapid scientific advancement and never-ending environmental change, there needs to be room for the thoughtful integration of scientific ideas, data, and concepts that feeds the mind and guides the development of the maturing science of ecology. Ecological Monographs provides that room, with an expansive view to a sustainable future.
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