McGill School of Environment, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 2T7.
Ecol Appl. 2010 Jan;20(1):179-91. doi: 10.1890/09-0128.1.
Understanding the causes of population declines often involves comprehending a complex set of interactions linking environmental and biotic changes, which in combination overwhelm a population's ability to persist. To understand these relationships, especially for long-lived large mammals, long-term data are required, but rarely available. Here we use 26-36 years of population and habitat data to determine the potential causes of group density changes for five species of primates in Kibale National Park, Uganda, in areas that were disturbed to varying intensities in the late 1960s. We calculated group density from line transect data and quantified changes in habitat structure (cumulative diameter at breast height [dbh] and food availability [cumulative dbh of food trees]) for each primate species, and for one species, we evaluated change in food nutritional quality. We found that mangabeys and black-and-white colobus group density increased, blue monkeys declined, and redtails and red colobus were stable in all areas. For blue monkeys and mangabeys, there were no significant changes in food availability over time, yet their group density changed. For redtails, neither group density measures nor food availability changed over time. For black-and-white colobus, a decrease in food availability over time in the unlogged forest surprisingly coincided with an increase in group density. Finally, while red colobus food availability and quality increased over time in the heavily logged area, their group density was stable in all areas. We suggest that these populations are in nonequilibrium states. If such states occur frequently, it suggests that large protected areas will be required to protect species so that declines in some areas can be compensated for by increases in adjacent areas with different histories.
了解人口减少的原因通常需要理解一系列复杂的相互作用,这些相互作用将环境和生物变化联系在一起,这些变化加在一起超过了种群的持续生存能力。为了理解这些关系,特别是对于寿命长的大型哺乳动物,需要长期的数据,但很少有可用的数据。在这里,我们使用了 26-36 年的种群和栖息地数据,来确定乌干达基巴莱国家公园 5 种灵长类动物群体密度变化的潜在原因,这些动物生活在 20 世纪 60 年代后期受到不同强度干扰的地区。我们从线截距数据计算了群体密度,并量化了每个灵长类物种的栖息地结构变化(累积胸径[dbh]和食物可利用性[累积食物树 dbh]),对于一种灵长类动物,我们评估了食物营养质量的变化。我们发现,白臀长尾猴和黑白疣猴的群体密度增加,蓝猴的群体密度下降,红尾猴和红脸疣猴的群体密度在所有地区都保持稳定。对于蓝猴和白臀长尾猴,随着时间的推移,食物的可利用性没有显著变化,但它们的群体密度发生了变化。对于红尾猴,随着时间的推移,群体密度和食物可利用性都没有变化。对于黑白疣猴,令人惊讶的是,随着时间的推移,未被采伐森林中食物的可利用性减少,同时其群体密度增加。最后,虽然在高度采伐的地区,红疣猴的食物可利用性和质量随着时间的推移而增加,但它们的群体密度在所有地区都保持稳定。我们认为这些种群处于非平衡状态。如果这种状态经常发生,那么就需要建立大型保护区来保护物种,以便在某些地区的数量减少时,可以由具有不同历史的相邻地区的数量增加来补偿。