实现地理范围的快速扩张——角色行为的变化

Corina Logan, Kelsey McCune, Christa LeGrande-Rolls, Zara Marfori, Josephine Hubbard, Dieter Lukas
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引用次数: 1

摘要

人们普遍认为,行为灵活性,即在环境变化时改变行为的能力,在物种迅速扩大其地理范围的能力中起着重要作用。大尾石嘴鸦(Quiscalus mexicanus)是一种群居、一夫多妻的物种,通过在新的地区和栖息地定居,迅速扩大其地理范围。它们行为灵活,与人类改造的环境高度相关,除了以昆虫和地面上的其他天然食物为食外,还吃各种人类食物。它们提供了一个机会来评估行为改变在企业扩张过程中的作用。我们比较了两个种群在其分布范围内的野外捕获的白嘴鸦的行为(一个较老的种群位于北部扩张前沿的中部:亚利桑那州的坦佩,一个较新种群位于扩张前沿的北部边缘:加利福尼亚州的林地),以调查某些行为(灵活性、创新性、探索性和持久性)是否在较新或较老的种群中具有更高的平均值和方差。我们发现边缘种群中的白头鸦具有更高的灵活性方差(通过反向学习测量)和更高的持久性平均值(他们参与了更大比例的试验),并且在灵活性,创新性(在多址盒上解决的位点数量)或探索(接近新环境的延迟)的平均水平上没有种群差异。我们的研究结果表明,在边缘种群中表达特定行为的个体差异可以促进大尾石头鸟的快速地理范围扩张,并且我们没有发现一些特征的重要性,这些特征被假设参与了这种扩张。我们的发现突出了种群研究的价值,以及将认知概念分解为个体能力的直接衡量标准,以更好地理解物种如何适应新环境。
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Implementing a rapid geographic range expansion - the role of behavior changes
It is generally thought that behavioral flexibility, the ability to change behavior when circumstances change, plays an important role in the ability of species to rapidly expand their geographic range. Great-tailed grackles (Quiscalus mexicanus) are a social, polygamous species that is rapidly expanding its geographic range by settling in new areas and habitats. They are behaviorally flexible and highly associated with human-modified environments, eating a variety of human foods in addition to foraging on insects and on the ground for other natural food items. They offer an opportunity to assess the role of behavior change over the course of their expansion. We compared behavior in wild-caught grackles from two populations across their range (an older population in the middle of the northern expansion front: Tempe, Arizona, and a more recent population on the northern edge of the expansion front: Woodland, California) to investigate whether certain behaviors (flexibility, innovativeness, exploration, and persistence) have higher averages and variances in the newer or older population. We found that grackles in the edge population had a higher flexibility variance (measured by reversal learning) and a higher persistence average (they participated in a larger proportion of trials), and that there were no population differences in average levels of flexibility, innovativeness (number of loci solved on a multiaccess box), or exploration (latency to approach a novel environment). Our results elucidated that individuals differentially expressing a particular behavior in an edge population could facilitate the rapid geographic range expansion of great-tailed grackles, and we found no support for the importance of several traits that were hypothesized to be involved in such an expansion. Our findings highlight the value of population studies and of breaking down cognitive concepts into direct measures of individual abilities to better understand how species might adapt to novel circumstances.
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