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狼会根据当地栖息地质量调整领地大小,而非狼群规模。

Wolves adapt territory size, not pack size to local habitat quality.

作者信息

Kittle Andrew M, Anderson Morgan, Avgar Tal, Baker James A, Brown Glen S, Hagens Jevon, Iwachewski Ed, Moffatt Scott, Mosser Anna, Patterson Brent R, Reid Douglas E B, Rodgers Arthur R, Shuter Jen, Street Garrett M, Thompson Ian D, Vander Vennen Lucas M, Fryxell John M

机构信息

Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, 50 Stone Road E., Guelph, Ontario, N1G 2W1, Canada.

Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, 1235 Queen Street East, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, P6A 2E5, Canada.

出版信息

J Anim Ecol. 2015 Sep;84(5):1177-86. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12366. Epub 2015 Apr 6.

Abstract
  1. Although local variation in territorial predator density is often correlated with habitat quality, the causal mechanism underlying this frequently observed association is poorly understood and could stem from facultative adjustment in either group size or territory size. 2. To test between these alternative hypotheses, we used a novel statistical framework to construct a winter population-level utilization distribution for wolves (Canis lupus) in northern Ontario, which we then linked to a suite of environmental variables to determine factors influencing wolf space use. Next, we compared habitat quality metrics emerging from this analysis as well as an independent measure of prey abundance, with pack size and territory size to investigate which hypothesis was most supported by the data. 3. We show that wolf space use patterns were concentrated near deciduous, mixed deciduous/coniferous and disturbed forest stands favoured by moose (Alces alces), the predominant prey species in the diet of wolves in northern Ontario, and in proximity to linear corridors, including shorelines and road networks remaining from commercial forestry activities. 4. We then demonstrate that landscape metrics of wolf habitat quality - projected wolf use, probability of moose occupancy and proportion of preferred land cover classes - were inversely related to territory size but unrelated to pack size. 5. These results suggest that wolves in boreal ecosystems alter territory size, but not pack size, in response to local variation in habitat quality. This could be an adaptive strategy to balance trade-offs between territorial defence costs and energetic gains due to resource acquisition. That pack size was not responsive to habitat quality suggests that variation in group size is influenced by other factors such as intraspecific competition between wolf packs.
摘要
  1. 尽管领地内捕食者密度的局部差异通常与栖息地质量相关,但这种常见关联背后的因果机制却鲜为人知,可能源于群体规模或领地大小的适应性调整。2. 为了在这些替代假设之间进行检验,我们使用了一种新颖的统计框架来构建安大略省北部狼(Canis lupus)冬季种群水平的利用分布,然后将其与一系列环境变量相关联,以确定影响狼空间利用的因素。接下来,我们将此分析得出的栖息地质量指标以及猎物丰度的独立测量值与狼群规模和领地大小进行比较,以研究哪种假设最能得到数据支持。3. 我们发现,狼的空间利用模式集中在安大略省北部狼的主要猎物物种驼鹿(Alces alces)所喜爱的落叶林、落叶/针叶混交林和受干扰的林分附近,以及靠近线性廊道的地方,包括商业林业活动遗留的海岸线和道路网络。4. 然后我们证明,狼栖息地质量的景观指标——预测的狼利用度、驼鹿占据的概率和首选土地覆盖类型的比例——与领地大小呈负相关,但与狼群规模无关。5. 这些结果表明,北方生态系统中的狼会根据栖息地质量的局部差异改变领地大小,但不会改变狼群规模。这可能是一种适应性策略,以平衡领地防御成本与资源获取带来的能量收益之间的权衡。狼群规模对栖息地质量没有反应,这表明群体规模的变化受其他因素影响,如狼群之间的种内竞争。

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