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1.
Past reproductive success affects future habitat selection 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Paul V. Switzer 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(5):307-312
Correlational studies have shown that an individual's past reproductive success often increases its breeding site fidelity
(i.e., the tendency to return to a previously occupied location), suggesting that individuals use their reproductive experience
to assess habitat quality. However, the causality of the relationship between reproductive success and site fidelity is still
uncertain. In a field experiment, the effect of mating success on site fidelity was isolated from potential confounding variables
in a territorial dragonfly, the eastern amberwing (Perithemis tenera). The experiment controlled for site quality, intrinsic characteristics of males, previous territorial experience at the
site, arrival order, and territorial evictions. Males that were prevented from mating were much more likely to change sites
the following day than control males that were allowed to mate. This result was not affected by age, the amount of time a
male spent on the site, or mortality. These results imply that individuals use their own reproductive success to assess the
quality of the habitat. The benefit to an individual of using its reproductive success to determine habitat quality is discussed
relative to other sources of information.
Received: 31 May 1996 / Accepted: 31 January 1997 相似文献
2.
Lek structure and territoriality in the chryxus arctic butterfly,Oeneis chryxus (Satyridae) 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Richard W. Knapton 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1985,17(4):389-395
Summary The territorial and mating systems of the satyrid butterfly Oeneis chryxus were studied for 3 years on individually marked populations in algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario. Males defended territories in a dry open forest clearing by means of chases and spiral flights with conspecifies. Defended areas did not contain food or oviposition sites required by females. Territories were not uniformly distributed over the study area; the highest density of territories was clustered over bare ground covered with sand and small stones rather than areas of vegetation. This pattern of distribution of territories occurred during each year of the study. The patterns of occupancy of territories showed a high degree of consistency from one day to the next, some males defending a given territory for as many as 11 consecutive days. Removal experiments showed that a surplus of non-territorial males did not exist. Vacant territories in the high-density area were absorbed by neighboring males; those in the low-density area remained empty. Male size was not correlated with territory position in the study are. Wing patterning (i.e. size of spots) differed between males occupying territories on sandy/stony versus vegetated areas. The territorial and mating systems of O. chryxus resemble lek polygyny, and are more similar to some vertebrate lek systems than to hilltopping or landmark territoriality. 相似文献
3.
Denson Kelly McLain 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1984,14(3):181-187
Summary Adults of the seed bug, Neacoryphus bicrucis, are most numerous in large host plant patches and where host plants are most dense within patches. Males patrol small territories composed of host plants and expel other males and unreceptive females. Larger males aggressively exclude smaller males from high quality territories where both host plants and females are most dense. Consequently, large males mate more frequently than small males. Males remain for longer time in areas where host plants are more dense. However, mating experience influences tenure within a host plant patch such that males tend to remain where they have recently mated. Courtship is aggressive and male territorial behavior is similar to courtship behavior. Preference for territories in areas of high host plant density appears to have been selected to increase the rate of encounter with females which preferentially oviposit in areas of high host plant density. 相似文献
4.
Jesko Partecke Arndt von Haeseler Martin Wikelski 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2002,51(6):579-587
The territory establishment of male marine iguanas and their subsequent mating success were analysed to identify spatial spillover (hotshot) and temporal spillover effects on lek formation. Males started to establish small display territories 2 months ahead of the mating season. Males did not establish territories in temporal synchrony and did not settle at sites where the probability of encountering females was highest. However, males arriving later preferentially established their territories in the neighbourhood of already established territories independently of the density of female-sized iguanas in these territories. Although settling in close proximity, there were no fights between those males. The number of fights between territorial males increased towards, and peaked during, the mating season. Fights did not result in the transfer of space, indicating that space per se was no resource. Instead, fights were directed towards central (hotshot) males. These central males had higher mating success than marginal males. Female density during the time of territory establishment did not predict the mating success of males, because females changed their spatial preferences between early establishment and mating periods. Similarly, the areas where males achieved the highest numbers of copulations changed during 4 years of our study. Thus, there was no evidence for temporal spillover between subsequent seasons. However, most male-male interactions served to distract successful males and may lead to spatial spillover of females into territories of unsuccessful males. In marine iguanas, territorial establishment appears largely governed by hotshot processes. 相似文献
5.
W. Gladstone 《Marine Biology》1987,96(2):185-191
Sharpnose puffers, Canthigaster valentini (Pisces: Tetraodontidae) at Lizard Island, Australia, live in made-dominated haremic social and mating systems. The hypothesis
was that mature females are restricted in their movements and can be monopolized by some males. Field experiments at Lizard
Island, Great Barrier Reef, between January and March 1983 showed that mature females were still territorial in the absence
of males and movements of females were not controlled by males. Males abandoned their territories when their females were
removed. The territorial behavior of those males with access to females (territorial males) restricted the access of other
males (bachelor males) to them. Bachelor males took over harems and became territorial males when established territorial
males were removed. The results of the experiments thus supported the hypothesis. 相似文献
6.
Parental investment, potential reproductive rates, and mating system in the strawberry dart-poison frog, Dendrobates pumilio 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
We studied the effect of relative parental investment on potential reproductive rates (PRRs) to explain sex differences in
selectivity and competition in the dart-poison frog Dendrobates pumilio. We recorded the reproductive behavior of this species in a Costa Rican lowland rainforest for almost 6 months. Females spent
more time on parental care than males, and `time out' estimates suggest that PRRs of males are much higher than than those
of females, rendering females the limiting sex in the mating process. Males defended territories that provide suitable calling
sites, space for courtship and oviposition, and prevent interference by competitors. Male mating success was highly variable,
from 0 to 12 matings, and was significantly correlated with calling activity and average perch height, but was independent
of body size and weight. Estimates of opportunity for sexual selection and variation in male mating success are given. The
mating system is polygamous: males and females mated several times with different mates. Females were more selective than
males and may sample males between matings. The discrepancy in PRRs between the sexes due to differences in parental investment
and the prolonged breeding season is sufficient to explain the observed mating pattern i.e., selective females, high variance
in male mating success, and the considerable opportunity for sexual selection.
Received: 9 June 1998 / Received in revised form: 27 March 1999 / Accepted: 3 April 1999 相似文献
7.
Summary At the National Bison Range (western Montana, USA), pronghorn (Antilocapra american) maintained a territorial mating system from as early as 1965 through 1978. Preliminary observations in 1981 suggested that the mating system had changed. Data from the ruts, 1982–1984 revealed a progressive decay in territoriality. In this paper, data from the territorial years 1969–1978 are contrasted with data from the decay years 1982–1984, with results as follow: 1. In 1982–84, fewer territories were defended than in 1969–78. This was attributable to a smaller proportion of males defending territories in 1982–84, not to a smaller number of males. 2. In 1982–84, most territory owners either abandoned their territories early in ruts, or lost control of females on them following frequent, persistent intrusions by non-territorial males. Abandonment and loss of control did not occur in 1969–78. 3. In 1982–84, territorial males that maintained control of females on their territories did so by shrinking their zones of defense to small areas around female groups. 4. In 1982–84, following the disruption or severe disturbance of all territories, many females left territories, and mated elsewhere, with non-territorial males. In 1969–78, most females remained on territories throughout rut, and mated with territory owners. —The mating system change followed catastrophic winter mortality, 1978–79, that removed 75% of the males, including all males older than 5 years, and all male fawns, from the population. In 1982–84, the number of males present was not different from the number of males in 1969–1978, but the frequency distribution of male ages was strongly shifted toward younger ages. The small number of older males, 1982–84, likely resulted in smaller proportions of males initially defending territories, and in less effective territory defense. When females then clustered on the few territories where defense was at first successful, they attracted large numbers of non-territorial males. The resulting high rates of raids on these territories, coupled with reduced defense radii by territorial males, allowed females only 12% reclining time (summer percentage was 39%). This increased energy cost, plus an apparently greater risk of injury on weakly defended territories, appeared to prompt many females to seek calmer matings elsewhere. Also, if female pronghorn practiced mate selection based upon horn or body size, they may have reduced their efforts to remain on territories in 1982–84. Males from 1969–78 were larger than males from 1982–84, and showed greater variance in horn size. At least two conditions appear to influence the tendency of males to be territorial. First, males must be at least three years old before they attempt to defend a territory. Second, the declining proportion of males defending territories, 1982–84, that coincided with an increasing number of males three years and older, suggests that males also decide whether or not to attempt territory defense based upon the frequency of territorial defense in the population. 相似文献
8.
Masashi Kiyota Stephen J. Insley Stacey L. Lance 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2008,62(5):739-746
We conducted a 6-year longitudinal behavioral and genetic investigation of a highly polygynous pinniped, the northern fur
seal (Callorhinus ursinus), to determine the contribution of terrestrial polygyny to male fertilization success and to assess the occurrence of alternative
mating strategies. Genetic samples from 37 adult males, 50 adult females, and 85 pups were collected and genotyped using five
polymorphic microsatellite loci. Pup paternity was assigned using Cervus 2.0 at 99% confidence level. Paternity of 83 pups
(98%) was assigned to terrestrial males who held territories or stayed temporarily in the study area during the breeding season
when fertilization occurred. For 56 pups of which attendance records of their mothers were available, paternity of 45 pups
(80%) was assigned to the associate males in whose territory their mothers stayed during the perioestrus period. In addition
to defending breeding territories, territorial males have often been observed attempting to forcibly abduct adult females
from adjacent territories (female stealing): We observed a total of 95 such cases, in which the stealers had significantly
fewer females than the territorial males from whose territories they stole females. Our results indicate that terrestrial
resource-defense polygyny is the major mating system in this species and that nonassociated paternity occurs mostly as a result
of alternative mating strategies of less successful males. Male northern fur seals thus appear to adopt conditional alternative
strategies that depend on their current social status to maximize their life-time reproductive success. 相似文献
9.
Kooji Hayashi 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1985,16(4):301-306
Summary Males of the water strider Gerris elongatus established territories which included copulation and oviposition sites (small pieces of fallen bamboo). Males were aggressive and competition for territory and females was observed frequently. Male midlegs were more developed than female midlegs and were used as weapons. Reproductive behaviour changed as the breeding season advanced. Early in the season immature females were attracted by male surface wave courtship signals, then copulated white floating on the water surface without ovipositing (type 1). In midseason, males established territories, produced calling signals and attracted females which copulated and oviposited there with male postcopulatory guarding (type 2). In late season, many females oviposited without postcopulatory guarding on pondweed mats near fallen bamboo. Non-territorial males waiter for the arrival of these females and copulated without courtship, but mating success was low (type 3). These alternative mating strategies appeared to depend on differences in male size. Larger males were superior to smaller males in many ways (establishing territory, fighting, mating etc.). The largest males defended territories and had higher mating success than small non-territorial males. Medium sized males used all three strategies according to the number of empty territories and seasonal femald distribution. 相似文献
10.
Yoshitaka Tsubaki Yuka Samejima Michael T. Siva-Jothy 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2010,64(10):1547-1554
Males of some territorial calopterygid damselflies show an elaborate courtship display that involves high-frequency wing-beats
directed toward an incoming female. Although it has been suggested that female mate preference is based on some characteristics
of male’s courtship display, it is unclear whether the courtship display varies between males or is influenced by environmental
conditions. We combined two recent technologies, thermographic imaging and high-speed digital videography, to show that the
wing-beat frequency during courtship (i.e., courtship intensity) in a damselfly, Mnais costalis, is correlated with thorax temperature. Our data indicated that (1) male thorax temperature was associated with solar exposure
in his territory, (2) environmentally derived thermal gain enhanced courtship intensity, (3) hotter males were more likely
to copulate than others, and (4) female thorax temperature during oviposition within a territory was associated with solar
exposure. Males with territories that have longer exposure to sun spots are expected to attain higher thorax temperatures
for longer and so are able to successfully court more females. We suggest that females benefit from mating with hot males
because they will be on a warmer territory while ovipositing. Hot males might also have greater mate guarding ability, and/or
eggs may develop faster in warmer territories. 相似文献
11.
M. J. Freake 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1998,43(4-5):339-344
Sleepy lizards are monogamous skinks which show high pair fidelity. This study reveals inter- and intrasexual differences
in homeward orientation performance in this lizard. Male and female lizards were displaced during three phases of the spring
activity period, the pre-pairing, pairing/mating, and post-pairing periods. All groups (with the exception of post-pairing
males) were significantly oriented homewards, but males were significantly better oriented towards home than females during
the pairing period. Furthermore, males were significantly better homeward oriented during the pre-pairing and pairing periods
than in the post-pairing period. Similar results were observed for rate of movement away from the release site. In sleepy
lizards, sex-based differences in homing behaviour are unlikely to be attributable to differences in the area of familiarity,
or availability of orientation mechanisms. However differences in homing motivation may explain these differences. Males may
miss mating if absent from the home range during the pre-pairing and pairing periods, while females may still be able to obtain
a mating even when absent. Females however may be more motivated than males to return to the familiar home range during the
post-pairing period to ensure efficient feeding during internal embryo development.
Received: 16 February 1998 / Accepted after revision: 28 March 1998 相似文献
12.
Male migratory birds tend to be more faithful than females to previous breeding sites, suggesting sex differences in costs or benefits of dispersal. In Illinois, greater site fidelity by male yellow-headed blackbirds (Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus) was associated with reduced reproductive success the following year for dispersers relative to non-dispersers. Dispersing females suffered no reduction in reproductive success the following year. Males that attracted few social mates, and thus had low reproductive success, were more likely to disperse, whereas females dispersed in response to low-patch reproductive success, regardless of their individual performance. Males that dispersed appeared to be successful acquiring territories because none was observed as a floater. The rate of dispersal by males in this low-density population was greater than in more dense populations where dispersing males may be less successful at acquiring territories. Despite success at obtaining territories, males that dispersed acquired territories on the periphery of wetlands where fewer females nested, resulting in lower reproductive success. In the second year after dispersing, however, males moved onto more central territories where they acquired larger harems. Thus, dispersal by males may be a long-term strategy requiring at least 2 years for benefits to be realized. Long-term success was enhanced because dispersing males moved to wetlands on which reproductive success was higher than on the wetlands they left. In addition to demonstrating that both individual and patch reproductive success affect dispersal decisions, these data indicate that when evaluating costs and benefits of dispersal, researchers should use a time frame beyond 1 year. 相似文献
13.
We tested several hypotheses to explain low between-year territory fidelity in a breeding population of yellow-headed blackbirds (Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus). During a 5-year study the population of territorial males declined by two-thirds and some of the marshes that supported territories significantly deteriorated. Individual males held territories and bred for an average of 1.9 years. Of males that bred for at least 2 years, 30% skipped owning a territory in the study area during at least 1 year of their breeding lifetimes. Our information suggests that they may have bred outside of the area in those years. Of males with territories in two or more breeding seasons, 60% changed breeding marshes at least once. Males changed territories during 42.9% of between-year opportunities to do so. We found no support for the hypotheses that male yellow-headed blackbirds: (1) are more likely to move when territory density is low; (2) are likely to abandon territories that are deteriorating; or (3) change territories to improve their reproductive success. We suggest three non-mutually exclusive explanations for the yellow-headed blackbird's weak site fidelity: (1) it is a response to habitat deterioration and to other factors that may be causing the population's decline; (2) the males, being migratory, make fresh settlement decisions each year after they arrive on the breeding grounds in the general vicinity of their previous year's breeding; (3) yellow-headed blackbirds may have evolved in, and be adapted to, highly unstable habitats, moving frequently in response to changes in local breeding site conditions.
Correspondence to: L.D. Beletsky 相似文献
14.
R. G. Harcourt J. J. Kingston M. F. Cameron J. R. Waas M. A. Hindell 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(4):643-652
For polygynous mammals with no paternal care, the number of offspring sired is often the sole measure of male reproductive
success. The potential for polygyny is highest when resources or other environmental factors such as restricted breeding sites
force females to aggregate. In these circumstances, males compete intensely for females and mating success may vary greatly
among males, further intensifying selection for those traits that confer an advantage in reproduction. Hence, determinants
of male success in competition for females are likely to be under strong sexual selection. Paternity analysis was used in
conjunction with measures of age, site fidelity, and behavior during the breeding season to assess variance in male breeding
success in Weddell seals (Leptonychotes weddellii) breeding at Turtle Rock, McMurdo Sound (77.727S, 166.85E) between 1997 and 2000. Paternity could be assigned to 177 pups
at relaxed or 80% confidence level or 111 pups at strict or 95% confidence levels. Weddell seals at Turtle Rock show a modest
degree of polygyny with the greatest number of pups sired by any individual male in a single season equalling 5 or ∼10% of
the pups born. Over four consecutive years, most (89.2%) males sired at least one pup. In a generalized linear model (GLM),
age and the age first seen at the study site as an adult were unrelated to mating success, but adult experience, either site-specific
or elsewhere in McMurdo Sound, over the reproductive life span of males explained nearly 40% of variance in total mating success
with 80% confidence and 24% of variance at 95% confidence. While learning where females are likely to be may enhance male
reproductive success, aquatic mating reduces the ability of males to monopolize females, and thereby increases equity in mating
success. 相似文献
15.
In monogamous species, females often choose between males according to the quality of the territories they defend, but the
extent to which females themselves contribute to territory defence is frequently underestimated. Here we test for differences
in male and female roles during paired scent-marking bouts, a key component of territorial defence, in a monogamous antelope.
In two populations (Kenya, Zimbabwe) of klipspringer, Oreotragus oreotragus, both males and females usually scent-marked at the same site, but there were significant differences between sexes in terms
of investment within bouts. Females initiated most bouts, thus dictating the marking strategy of the pair. Males initiated
relatively few bouts, but deposited more scent marks per bout than females and were usually the last to scent-mark before
leaving the site; they marked on the same branches as the female and thus overmarked her scent. Both sexes deposited more
marks during paired than solo visits. Immediately preceding and following scent-marking bouts, males approached females and
females left males more often than expected. Female scent-marking rates were higher when they were receptive than at other
times, and this increase was matched by elevated marking rates of males. Females may increase marking rates when they are
receptive in order to test the quality of their mate or to incite male competition. However, these ideas are unlikely to explain
female scent-marking behaviour outside the mating season, which appears to be related primarily to territorial defence. We
suggest that these differences in investment in scent-marking bouts are consistent with predictions that females may be autonomously
territorial and that overmarking of female scent by males is a form of mate-guarding.
Received: 17 November 1999 / Received in revised form: 24 February 2000 / Accepted: 13 March 2000 相似文献
16.
Most social primates live in cohesive groups, so travel paths inevitably reflect compromise: decision processes of individuals
are obscured. The fission–fusion social organisation of the chimpanzee, however, allows an individual's movements to be investigated
independently. We followed 15 chimpanzees (eight male and seven female) through the relatively flat forest of Budongo, Uganda,
plotting the path of each individual over periods of 1–3 days. Chimpanzee movement was parsed into phases ending with halts
of more than 20 min, during which individuals fed, rested or engaged in social activities. Males, lactating or pregnant females
and sexually receptive females all travelled similar average distances between halts, at similar speeds and along similarly
direct beeline paths. Compared to lactating or pregnant females, males did travel for a significantly longer time each day
and halted more often, but the most striking sex differences appeared in the organisation of movement phases into a day's
path. After a halt, males tended to continue in the same direction as before. Lactating or pregnant females showed no such
strategy and often retraced the preceding phase, returning to previously visited food patches. We suggest that female chimpanzee
movements approximate an optimal solution to feeding requirements, whereas the paths of males allow integration of foraging
with territorial defence. The ‘continually moving forwards’ strategy of males enables them to monitor their territory boundaries—border
checking—whilst foraging, generally avoiding the explicit boundary patrols observed at other chimpanzee study sites. 相似文献
17.
Summary Field observations were made on the mating behavior of two congeneric species of solitary bees, Anthidium porterae in an arid grassland and A. palliventre in a coastal sand dune habitat. Males of both species exhibited resource defence polygyny and defended hostplants to gain access to females foraging for nectar and pollen. The mating frequencies of marked and measured resident (territorial) males were monitored during periods of continuous observation, following which measurements of territory size and floral resources were obtained. Mating success of A. palliventre males was strongly influenced by territory characteristics: Males that defended small areas with a few rich hostplant patches mated more often than males that held larger territories containing many hostplant patches of low floral density. Large males generally held high-quality sites and thus had a mating advantage over smaller individuals. In A. porterae, on the other hand, male mating success was unrelated to any measure of territory quality. Copulation frequency and male size were positively correlated, however, apparently due to the increased ability of large males to seize and hold females for mating. The two species also differed in the incidence of non-territorial, sneaky males. While absent in A. palliventre, sneaky males accounted for 12% of all mating observed in A. porterae. Males of A. porterae that displayed sneaky tactics mated, on average, as often as resident males.
Offprint requests to: E.M. Villalobos 相似文献
18.
Both cooperation and conflict between the sexes are commonplace in monogamous mating systems. However, little is known about
how cooperation and competition varies seasonally in monogamous species that maintain permanent territories. We presented
territorial pairs of male and female New Zealand robins (Petroica australis) with a large supply of insect prey at monthly intervals for 2 years. Behavioural observations after food presentation were
then made to quantify seasonal and sexual differences in aggressive interactions over prey, prey acquisition rates, mate provisioning,
offspring provisioning, selfish food hoarding and cache retrieval. Data were used to evaluate sex-specific behavioural strategies
of mediating competition for food. Results showed that males aggressively excluded females from experimental food sources
year-round. Females only accessed food sources when males left them unattended. Consequently, females acquired fewer prey
than males. After controlling for differences in prey acquisition, both sexes consumed similar amounts of prey in the non-breeding
season. Even though males aggressively excluded females from accessing food sources directly, males fed large amounts of prey
to females during the breeding season. Both sexes provisioned young at similar rates. Males cached less prey than females
in the breeding season but more prey than females in the non-breeding season. Females showed similar caching intensities year-round.
Although males tried to defend their hoards, females frequently retrieved male-made caches. Overall, results showed that although
New Zealand robins cooperate to raise offspring during the breeding season, conflict between the sexes occurs year-round.
Males and females display different behavioural strategies to gain access to experimental food sources, which appear to lessen
male–female competition for food and evenly distribute food resources between the sexes. 相似文献
19.
Dale M. Madison 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1980,7(1):65-71
Summary Free-ranging, sexually mature meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) were tracked by using radiotelemetry from June through August in Front Royal, Virginia, U.S.A. Estimates of intraspecific spacing were derived from the concurrent movements of up to 16 voles. Positions were recorded hourly for 24 h, twice per week. A total of 16 male and 15 female voles were studied during sixteen 24-h sessions.The daily ranges of males (192.3±109.7 m2) were larger and more variable than those of females (68.6±39.4 m2). Males also changed locations more frequently (Fig. 2).Adult females usually maintained territories free of other females; males overlapped considerably among themselves (Fig. 2). Males temporarily moved into the areas occupied by estrous females, indicating intrasexual competition among males for access to receptive females (Fig. 3).
M. pennsylvanicus appears to be promiscuous, is socially organized into territorial, maternal-young units during the breeding season, and fits the female territorial model of population regulation. 相似文献
20.
Our best understanding of marine mammal mating systems comes from land-mating pinnipeds. Logistical problems of observing behavior at sea have limited our ability to make inferences about species with aquatic-mating systems, which comprise over half the pinnipeds. The mating systems of these species likely involve different mating tactics than land-mating species. We used several methods in combination (e.g., animal-borne cameras, radio telemetry, time-depth recorders, and DNA paternity assessment) to provide a comprehensive study of the aquatic-mating tactics of harbor seal males. Males decreased time offshore (26.0 vs 14.8%) and increased time near shore (33.8 vs 43.7%) between premating and mating periods, respectively. Concomitantly, males reduced foraging effort and increased activities associated with competition for females (e.g., visual/vocal displays and threats). As females come into estrus near the end of lactation and spend more time at sea, males reduced their near-shore ranges (4.2 vs 1.0 km2), which were clustered within 1–1.5 km of the beach where females attended their pups. Body mass of males was not a major factor affecting their reproductive behavior. From a small number of paternity assignments to study males, it appears that females select males. These combined results are more consistent with a lek-type mating system than with the territorial or female defense systems characteristic of land-mating pinnipeds. 相似文献