有蹄类动物迁徙的原因、后果和保护

M. Kauffman, Ellen O. Aikens, S. Esmaeili, P. Kaczensky, A. Middleton, K. Monteith, T. Morrison, T. Mueller, H. Sawyer, J. Goheen
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引用次数: 27

摘要

由于现代动物追踪技术的创新,我们对有蹄类动物迁徙的理解正在迅速发展。在此,我们回顾和综合了近70年来关于野生有蹄类动物迁徙和其他长距离运动的研究。尽管长期以来人们一直认为有蹄类动物的迁徙是为了增加对饲料的获取,但最近的研究表明,它们的迁徙是根据饲料、雪和干旱季节性变化的动态景观进行微调的。研究人员开始了解有蹄类动物是如何进行迁徙的,有一种新兴的观点认为,动物将梯度跟踪与空间记忆结合在一起,其中一些是社会习得的。尽管迁徙通常会促进种群数量的增加,并对生态系统产生广泛的影响,但世界各地的许多迁徙已经消失,或者目前正受到栖息地破碎化、气候变化和迁徙障碍的威胁。幸运的是,利用经验跟踪数据详细绘制迁徙地图的新努力正在促进有效的保护措施,以维持有蹄类迁徙。预计《生态、进化和分类学年度评论》第52卷的最终在线出版日期为2021年11月。修订后的估计数请参阅http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates。
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Causes, Consequences, and Conservation of Ungulate Migration
Our understanding of ungulate migration is advancing rapidly due to innovations in modern animal tracking. Herein, we review and synthesize nearly seven decades of work on migration and other long-distance movements of wild ungulates. Although it has long been appreciated that ungulates migrate to enhance access to forage, recent contributions demonstrate that their movements are fine tuned to dynamic landscapes where forage, snow, and drought change seasonally. Researchers are beginning to understand how ungulates navigate migrations, with the emerging view that animals blend gradient tracking with spatial memory, some of which is socially learned. Although migration often promotes abundant populations—with broad effects on ecosystems—many migrations around the world have been lost or are currently threatened by habitat fragmentation, climate change, and barriers to movement. Fortunately, new efforts that use empirical tracking data to map migrations in detail are facilitating effective conservation measures to maintain ungulate migration. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, Volume 52 is November 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
19.90
自引率
1.70%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics is a scholarly publication that has been in circulation since 1970. It focuses on important advancements in the areas of ecology, evolutionary biology, and systematics, with relevance to all forms of life on Earth. The journal features essay reviews that encompass various topics such as phylogeny, speciation, molecular evolution, behavior, evolutionary physiology, population dynamics, ecosystem processes, and applications in invasion biology, conservation, and environmental management. Recently, the current volume of the journal transitioned from a subscription-based model to open access through the Annual Reviews' Subscribe to Open program. Consequently, all articles published in the current volume are now available under a CC BY license.
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