Ebensperger Luis A, Chesh Adrian S, Castro Rodrigo A, Tolhuysen Liliana Ortiz, Quirici Verónica, Burger Joseph Robert, Sobrero Raúl, Hayes Loren D
Centro de Estudios Avanzados en Ecología y Biodiversidad, and Departamento de Ecología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Casilla 114-D, 6513677, Santiago, Chile (LAE, RAC, LOT, VQ, RS). Department of Biology, University of Louisiana at Monroe, Monroe, LA 71209, USA (ASC, JRB, LDH).
J Mammal. 2011;92(1):21-30. doi: 10.1644/09-MAMM-S-383.1.
Group living is thought to evolve whenever individuals attain a net fitness advantage due to reduced predation risk or enhanced foraging efficiency, but also when individuals are forced to remain in groups, which often occurs during high-density conditions due to limitations of critical resources for independent breeding. The influence of ecological limitations on sociality has been studied little in species in which reproduction is more evenly shared among group members. Previous studies in the caviomorph rodent Octodon degus (a New World hystricognath) revealed no evidence that group living confers an advantage and suggest that burrow limitations influence formation of social groups. Our objective was to examine the relevance of ecological limitations on sociality in these rodents. Our 4-year study revealed no association between degu density and use of burrow systems. The frequency with which burrow systems were used by degus was not related to the quality of these structures; only in 1 of the 4 years did the frequency of burrow use decrease with decreasing abundance of food. Neither the number of females per group nor total group size (related measures of degu sociality) changed with yearly density of degus. Although the number of males within social groups was lower in 2008, this variation was not related clearly to varying density. The percentage of females in social groups that bred was close to 99% and did not change across years of varying density. Our results suggest that sociality in degus is not the consequence of burrow limitations during breeding. Whether habitat limitations contribute to variation in vertebrate social systems is discussed.
人们认为,只要个体因捕食风险降低或觅食效率提高而获得净适应性优势,群体生活就会进化;但当个体被迫群居时,群体生活也会进化,这种情况通常发生在高密度条件下,因为独立繁殖所需的关键资源有限。在群体成员间繁殖较为平均的物种中,生态限制对社会性的影响鲜有研究。此前对豚鼠形啮齿动物八齿鼠(一种新大陆豪猪亚目动物)的研究没有发现群体生活具有优势的证据,并表明洞穴限制会影响社会群体的形成。我们的目标是研究这些啮齿动物中生态限制与社会性的相关性。我们为期4年的研究表明,八齿鼠的密度与洞穴系统的使用之间没有关联。八齿鼠使用洞穴系统的频率与这些洞穴结构的质量无关;只有在4年中的1年,洞穴使用频率才随着食物丰度的降低而下降。每组中的雌性数量和群体总规模(八齿鼠社会性的相关指标)都没有随着八齿鼠的年度密度变化而改变。虽然2008年社会群体中的雄性数量较少,但这种变化与密度变化并无明显关联。社会群体中繁殖的雌性比例接近99%,且在密度不同的年份中没有变化。我们的结果表明,八齿鼠的社会性并非繁殖期间洞穴限制的结果。本文还讨论了栖息地限制是否会导致脊椎动物社会系统的变化。