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1.
Abstract: Endangered species recovery plans commonly set goals for population size that are used to define the success of recovery efforts. We examined variation in these population recovery goals for bird species listed under the U. S. Endangered Species Act to determine whether there were simple predictors of recovery population size. The median population sizes that must be met for a species to be removed from the list or downlisted to the threatened category are 4000 and 1500 respectively, but the thresholds varied considerably. Most variation in population recovery goals ( ≥75%) was explained by the population size when the recovery plan was written. Species listed when their population's size was relatively large have higher population recovery goals, whereas those listed when populations were small have lower population goals. Population sizes set for recovery also increased over time and were higher for species listed throughout the United States rather than for part of the country. In combination, these three variables explained 86% of the variance in population goals for delisting and 94% of the variance in goals for downlisting. Body mass, annual fecundity, maximum lifespan, whether the population was listed as threatened or endangered, and whether a formal population viability analysis was conducted were variables not significantly associated with population recovery goals. Thus, we found that variables relating to the circumstances under which the populations were listed could explain almost all of the variance in recovery population goals, and that biological traits of the endangered birds explained little of the variance. 相似文献
2.
Amy C. Dolan Michael T. Murphy Lucas J. Redmond Debbie Duffield 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2009,63(10):1527-1537
Sex allocation theory predicts that if variance in reproductive success differs between the sexes, females who are able to
produce high-quality young should bias offspring sex ratio towards the sex with the higher potential reproductive success.
We tested the hypothesis that high-quality (i.e., heavy) female eastern kingbirds (Tyrannus tyrannus) that bred early in the breeding season would produce male-biased clutches. A significant opportunity for sexual selection
also exists in this socially monogamous but cryptically polygamous species, and we predicted that successful extra-pair (EP)
sires would be associated with an excess of male offspring. Although population brood sex ratio did not differ from parity,
it increased significantly with female body mass and declined with female breeding date, but was independent of the morphology
and display (song) behavior (correlates of reproductive success) of social males and EP sires. Male offspring were significantly
heavier than female offspring at fledging. Moreover, the probability that male offspring were resighted in subsequent years
declined with breeding date, and was greater in replacement clutches, but lower when clutch size was large. Probability of
resighting female offspring varied annually, but was independent of all other variables. Given that variance in reproductive
success of male kingbirds is much greater than that of females, and that male offspring are more expensive to produce and
have a higher probability of recruitment if fledged early in the season, our results support predictions of sex allocation
theory: high-quality (heavy) females breeding when conditions were optimal for male recruitment produced an excess of sons. 相似文献
3.
Guira cuckoos, Guira guira, exhibit a rare polygynandrous reproductive system with groups containing several male and female breeders, allowing for important tests of reproductive skew models. Female reproductive strategies involve leaving the group, varying clutch size, egg ejection and infanticide, among others. Here we examined the predictions of reproductive skew models relative to reproductive partitioning among females in groups. We used yolk protein electrophoresis to identify individual females eggs in joint nests. We found that reproductive partitioning favors early-laying females, which lay and incubate more eggs than females that begin laying later. Because the female that lays first tends to switch between repeated nesting bouts, and females do not always contribute eggs to each bout, female reproductive success tends to equalize within groups over time. The pattern of reproductive partitioning differs from that described for anis, another crotophagine joint-nester. We calculated reproductive skew indices for groups in 2 years, for both laying and incubation, as well as an overall population value. These were compared to random skew generated by simulations. Varying degrees of skew were found for different groups, and also across sequential nesting bouts of the same groups. Overall, however, skew did not deviate from random within the population. Nests that reached incubation tended to have lower skew values during the laying phase than nests terminated due to ejection of all eggs followed by desertion. Groups had higher reproductive skew indices in their first nesting bout of the season, and these nests frequently failed. These results illustrate the importance of social organization in determining not only individual, but group success in reproduction, and highlight the flexibility of vertebrate social behavior.Communicated by J. Dickinson 相似文献
4.
N. Kautsky 《Marine Biology》1982,68(2):143-160
Since Mytilus edulis L. is a biomass dominant in the Baltic much interest is focused on the ecology of the species. In this paper an attempt is made to quantitatively cover the reproductive cycle of a Baltic M. edulis population in order to provide data for energy flow models and to discuss aspects of recruitment in this species. Histological preparations of gonads showed that gametogenesis started with declining temperatures in autumn and proceeded very slowly through winter. At the beginning of March when food was supplied during the spring phytoplankton bloom, rapid maturation took place. This was also revealed by an increase in meat weight of the mussels. Only one spawning period was recorded, from the middle of May until the beginning of June, due to food being strongly limited to the population during the rest of the year. The length of the larval period was estimated as being 5 to 6 wk and settlement was registered from the end of June through July. In general the large annual variations found in the Baltic with regard to temperature and food abundance give rise to a more marked annual pattern in the reproductive cycle than is encountered in other seas. Fecundity was assessed for two populations from 4-and 15-m depths from studies covering two annual cycles of the changes in the relation of shell length — meat weight. The size-related fecundity was found to be equal in both populations and related to food abundance and not to growth or age. Fecundity, expressed as weight loss at spawning, ranged from 0% in 2-mm mussels and increased from 38 to 52% in 10-to 30-mm mussels. The fecundity as percentage of biomass in full-grown Baltic M. edulis is of similar magnitude as in full-grown mussels from other areas despite the smaller size of Baltic mussels. The reproductive output for the total 160 km2 research area was calculated as being 1 200 tons dry weight or 80% of the standing stock, which, due to the particular features of the Baltic M. edulis population probably represents the larger part of the total mussel production. This reproductive output, calculated as 8·107 eggs·m-2 and corresponding to 50% of the total annual zooplankton production, may thus consitute an important food source for herring larvae and carnivorous zooplankton. Recruitment was divided into two phases: (1) Recruitment of juveniles (=settlement of larvae), and (2) recruitment to breeding stock. Monitoring studies of settlement on ropes and the year round presence of high abundances of mussels <2 mm indicate that settlement is in excess of the demands for maintaining population size and that most settled mussels form a pool of competitively suppressed non-growing individuals. Not until death of an already established mussel will these become recruited to the breeding population. Thus recruitment is possible throughout the year which stabilizes the population and maintains it near the carrying capacity of the area with regard to food and space availability. 相似文献
5.
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
6.
Markéta Konečná Carl Smith Martin Reichard 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2010,64(7):1069-1079
Resource availability may affect both individual fitness and population demography and the effects can interact. We used two
experiments to test how breeding resource abundance and its spatial distribution, combined with female abundance, affected
male reproductive behavior, population spawning rate, and embryo development and recruitment in the European bitterling (Rhodeus amarus), a small cyprinid fish that lays its eggs in living unionid mussels. In the first experiment, we found that at the population
level the abundance of breeding resources (freshwater mussels) was more important for bitterling recruitment than resource
spatial distribution (clumped or regular). In contrast at the individual level, (variability in reproductive success) the
spatial distribution of resources was more important, but only when resource abundance was not limiting. Territorial males
obtained almost exclusive access to fertilizations when resources were abundant and distributed regularly, but were unable
to defend large clusters of resources (when rival abundance was always high) and abandoned territoriality. Surprisingly, territorial
males remained aggressive and successfully defended their territories when resources were grouped into a single cluster, but
at a low abundance. In the second experiment, more rapid embryo development and larger juvenile body size at the end of the
growing season was detected at high resource abundance and low female abundance, indicating that early hatched juveniles survived
better and hence investment in offspring production early in the season yields a higher fitness pay-offs. The abundance of
females in spawning condition was the best overall predictor of the intensity of male reproductive behavior in both experiments. 相似文献
7.
T. R. Pope 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2000,48(4):253-267
Evaluation of evolutionary mechanisms proposed to promote cooperative behavior depends on the relative influence of the behavior
on the reproductive success of individuals, the reproductive success of the group in which they interact behaviorally, and
the degree of gene correlation among cooperators. The genetic relationship within cooperative coalitions of female red howler
monkeys was examined for three populations with different densities and growth rates. Patterns of gene correlation change
within coalitions is documented using data from the mitochondrial and nuclear genomes, and long-term census monitoring. Differences
in fecundity and infant survivorship within and between groups of unrelated (rˉ=0) and related (rˉ≥ 0.25) females are compared. Females that emigrate from their natal groups form coalitions with other migrant females. These
coalitions attempt to establish a territory and, once successful in producing offspring, exclude other females from feeding
resources. Females in these coalitions had different mtDNA haplotypes and a genetically estimated mean r of 0, supporting demographic data on emigration patterns indicating that these females rarely have the opportunity to form
coalitions with kin. Patterns of recruitment and rate of matriline development within social groups supported behavioral data
indicating that females actively attempt to promote their own matriline as breeders over that of other females, and that some
matrilines are more successful at this than others. Mean r among females was significantly higher in coalitions established as social groups for several generations (rˉ=0.44). In these groups, females all shared the same mtDNA haplotype, and mtDNA haplotype divergence was significantly higher
between than within groups. Females in coalitions with kin had significantly higher reproductive success than females in unrelated
coalitions in all populations. This difference was not a function of coalition size, number of males, socionomic sex ratio,
or primiparity, although anecdotal evidence suggests that allomothering may compensate for inept new mothers in related coalitions
more often than in unrelated ones. Differences in territory quality could not be ruled out as a potential causal factor in
the saturated populations, but were unlikely in the low-density, growing population. There were substantial differences among
long-established coalitions in overall reproductive output in all three populations, and this was significantly correlated
with the number of breeding females. Increase in coalition size was a function of both group age and the behavioral tolerance
among females. Regardless of the underlying reasons for the patterns observed, reproductive success clearly increases with
degree of gene correlation among females within cooperative coalitions, and coalitions that recruit more daughters produce
more offspring. The nature of the cooperative relationship among group females directly influences both of these outcomes.
This is associated with substantial genetic differentiation among social groups within populations, creating conditions in
which genetic tendencies towards cooperative behavior can become tightly associated with group reproductive success.
Received: 15 September 1999 / Revised: 27 April 2000 / Accepted: 27 May 2000 相似文献
8.
Szabolcs Lengyel 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(4):589-598
When reproductive success is constant in one breeding phase, different tactics that increase variation in reproductive success
among individuals may evolve in other phases. For instance, in shorebirds, which usually have a limited clutch size of four
eggs, variation in reproductive tactics among individuals is expected either before egg-laying (e.g. diverse mating systems)
or after hatching of the young (e.g. diverse parental care). In this paper, I studied the pied avocet (Recurvirostra avosetta), a shorebird with a modal clutch size of four eggs, to test whether post-hatch chick adoption as an alternative tactic can
be linked to increased variation in annual reproductive success. When predation was high, naturally adopting pairs produced
more filial fledglings than did pairs not adopting chicks and not losing chicks to adoption. The number of filial fledglings
increased with the number of adopted young, possibly through diluting the chances of predation on filial young. Experimental
chick addition did not lead to more fledged young due to low brood integrity as shown by the frequent loss of chicks from
some experimental broods. When predation was low, larger broods occupied feeding territories with higher prey abundance than
smaller broods, possibly due to their dominance over smaller ones. Pairs that lost chicks to adoption (donors) fledged as
many filial young in their broods as did non-adopters/non-donors, whereas the total number of donors’ filial fledglings, including
those raised in adopting broods, approached that of adopters. These findings show, for the first time, that post-hatch alternative
reproductive tactics can lead to variation in annual reproductive success and to higher success for some pairs even in species
where past adaptations limit variation in reproductive success in a certain phase of reproduction. 相似文献
9.
M. L. Mallory A. J. Gaston M. R. Forbes H. G. Gilchrist B. Cheney S. Lewis P. M. Thompson 《Marine Biology》2008,154(6):1031-1040
Variation in the timing and abundance of marine food resources is known to affect the breeding behaviour of many seabirds,
constraining our understanding of the extent to which these behaviours vary in different parts of a species’ range. We studied
incubation shifts of northern fulmars (Fulmarus glacialis) breeding at two colonies in Arctic Canada (High Arctic oceanographic zone) and one colony in the UK (Boreal oceanographic
zone) between 2001 and 2005. Fulmars in Arctic Canada had longer incubation shifts than previously reported at more southern
colonies, presumably because marine productivity is lower early in the breeding season in the Arctic. Shift durations were
particularly long at one colony in years with abnormally late, extensive sea-ice cover, although at the other Arctic colony,
where sea-ice cover is predictably late every year, the duration of shifts was shorter than expected. At the Boreal colony,
incubation shifts were much longer than expected, similar to Arctic colonies, and likely attributable to poor marine food
supplies in the North Sea in recent years. Collectively, our data suggest that fulmars can adjust their incubation rhythm
to compensate for poor marine feeding conditions, although this may incur a cost to body condition or reproductive success. 相似文献
10.
Suzanne M. O’Regan Denis FlynnThomas C. Kelly Michael J.A. O’CallaghanAlexei V. Pokrovskii Dmitrii Rachinskii 《Ecological modelling》2012,224(1):54-64
The recent rapid growth of the woodpigeon population in the British Isles is a cause for concern for environmental managers. It is unclear what has driven their increase in abundance. Using a mathematical model, we explored two possible mechanisms, reduced intraspecific competition for food and increased reproductive success. We developed an age-structured hybrid model consisting of a system of ordinary differential equations that describes density-dependent mortality and a discrete component, which represents the birth-pulse. We investigated equilibrium population dynamics using our model. The two hypotheses predict contrasting population age profiles at equilibrium. We adapted the model to examine the impacts of control measures. We showed that an annual shooting season that follows the period of density-dependent mortality is the most effective control strategy because it simultaneously removes adult and juvenile woodpigeons. The model is a first step towards understanding the processes that influence the dynamics of woodpigeon populations. 相似文献
11.
We studied sexual selection in the red bishop, Euplectes orix, a colonial, polygynous weaverbird widely distributed over sub-Saharan Africa. Male reproductive success measured in terms
of the number of nests accepted by females and the number of eggs and nestlings in all the nests on a male's territory varied
considerably. The standardized variance (variance/mean2) in male reproductive success ranged from 0.505 to 1.737 in different years, indicating a high potential for sexual selection
in this species. An analysis of genetic parentage for 432 nestlings by non-radioactive, multilocus DNA fingerprinting confirmed
that male reproductive success (number of young sired on the territory) in this species can be reliably estimated by the measures
introduced above. In all 4 study years there was a strong positive correlation between male mating success and the total number
of nests that males built in their territories. The number of nests built can be partitioned into the number of weeks a male
held a territory and his nest-building performance. Both factors exert a significant positive effect on male mating success
and in combination explained between 53.3 and 86.3% of the variation in male reproductive success. Male morphological characters
were found to be of no importance. Males that established a territory in the following season built more nests and held their
territories for longer than males that did not establish a territory in the following season, suggesting that these measures
might be indicators of male condition and quality. Male nest-building performance (number of nests built per week) seems to
be unrelated to male condition or quality.
Received: 8 January 1999 / Received in revised form: 7 June 1999 / Accepted: 13 June 1999 相似文献
12.
Lewis W. Oring J. Michael Reed Mark A. Colwell David B. Lank Stephen J. Maxson 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2004,28(6):433-442
Summary We investigated factors affecting annual mating success (MS) and reproductive success (RS) of spotted sandpipers (Actitis macularia) from 13 years of a 17-year study at Little Pelican Island, Leech Lake, Minnesota. Analyses were restricted to ages 1–3. Mean annual female MS varied from 1.3 to 2.7 mates, and the MS pattern was indistinguishable from random. However, female MS increased with age and was affected by arrival date, territory size, and beach size. Female RS also increased with age, and number of mates and year effects were the most significant explanatory variables in each age. Older female RS was increased by priority on a territory and presence of a previous mate. Territory size and beach size varied with population density and did not predictably affect RS. The strong year affect on RS was associated with annual variation in sex ratio and predation. Males produce only one successful clutch per year, so MS greater than one is a result of nest loss and does not increase RS. Neither male MS nor RS changed with age. Male reproductive failure rate varied by year. Given that a male produced young, the degree of RS was affected by year, arrival date, priority on a territory, territory size, and beach size. In years with early-season predation, late arrivals had higher RS; territory and beach size effects varied by year. Neither the presence, nor degree, of female care was associated with male RS. Male RS was more subject to annual environmental variability than was female RS, probably because of relatively low annual potential RS among males.Offprint requests to: L.W. Oring at the current address 相似文献
13.
Allison C. Alberts Jeffrey M. Lemm Andrew M. Perry Lisa A. Morici John A. Phillips 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2002,51(4):324-335
In small, insular populations, behavioral patterns that lead to increased variance in individual reproductive success can
accelerate loss of genetic variation. Over a 1-year period, we documented behavior and hormone levels in a breeding group
of adult Cuban iguanas (Cyclura
nubila) at Guantánamo Bay. Male dominance was associated with body and head size, display behavior, testosterone levels, home-range
size, and proximity to females. Based on their success in agonistic encounters, we ranked males in a linear dominance hierarchy.
During the subsequent breeding season, we conducted a removal experiment in which the five highest-ranking males were temporarily
relocated from the study site. Although we were unable to assess reproductive success directly, previously lower-ranking males
assumed control of vacated territories, won more fights, and increased their proximity to females in the absence of the dominant
males. When it results in greater mating opportunities for otherwise socially suppressed individuals, temporary alteration
of local social structure may help limit erosion of genetic variation in small, insular populations.
Electronic Publication 相似文献
14.
Summary Over five hundred adult longhorn milkweed beetles, Tetraopes tetraophthalmus, were individually marked and their copulatory success followed for one month in a pasture of Asclepias syriaca in northern Indiana, USA. Migration of beetles from the field site was greatest from areas of low population density. Dispersal was significantly greater for males experiencing low copulatory success; a similar but nonsignificant trend was observed for females. Large males, which displayed greater site tenacity than small males, copulated more frequently than small males because of their ability to displace small males from females. Both large and small males demonstrated a preference for large females in laboratory tests. Male preference in combination with aggressive displacement of small males results in size-assortative mating which was much stronger under conditions of high population density. It contributes to variance in male reproductive success since female size is known to be correlated with fecundity and offspring viability. Variance in copulatory success is similar for males and females, suggesting that both sexes experience similar intensities of sexual selection with respect to this component of reproductive success. Futhermore, comparison of this with other studies suggests that the intensity of sexual selection among males is positively correlated with the variance in body size which appears to be under both stabilizing and directional sexual selection in males but not in females. 相似文献
15.
Vedder O Komdeur J van der Velde M Schut E Magrath MJ 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2011,65(4):741-752
Polygyny and extra-pair paternity are generally thought to enhance sexual selection. However, the extent to which these phenomena
increase variance in male reproductive success will depend on the covariance between success at these two strategies. We analysed
these patterns over four breeding seasons in facultatively polygynous blue tits Cyanistes caeruleus. We found that both polygyny and extra-pair paternity increased variance in male reproductive success and that standardised
variance in annual number of genetic fledglings was 2.6 times higher than standardised variance in apparent success when assuming
strict monogamy. Nevertheless, male success at securing within-pair paternity was unrelated to success at gaining extra-pair
paternity and, when considering the positive effect of age on extra-pair success and attracting a second female, polygynous
males were no more likely to sire extra-pair fledglings. Overall, polygynous males fledged more genetic offspring than monogamous
males, but first-year polygynous males lost a greater share of within-pair paternity. A literature review suggests that this
adverse effect of polygyny on within-pair paternity is frequent among birds, inconsistent with the prediction that females
engage in extra-pair copulation with successful males to obtain good genes. Furthermore, a male's share of paternity was repeatable
between years, and among females of polygynous males within years, such that a compatibility function of extra-pair copulations
was likewise unsupported. Instead, we suggest that the observed patterns are most consistent with a fertility insurance role
for extra-pair copulations, which does not exclude the greater opportunity for sexual selection through differential ability
of males to gain paternity. 相似文献
16.
Laurie A. Hunter 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1987,20(3):171-177
Summary The participation of breeders and helpers in the feeding of 21 broods of chicks was studied in a population of cooperatively breeding purple gallinules (Porphyrula martinica). In the breeding group, all birds over the age of 2 months fed chicks. Female breeders fed chicks at the highest rate, followed by male breeders and adult helpers, old juvenile helpers, and young juvenile helpers. The amount of food breeders fed chicks was independent of the number of helpers in the breeding group. However, breeders made fewer feeding visits when they had helpers. Male and female breeders spent similar amounts of time feeding chicks. Helpers spent significantly less time feeding chicks than did breeders. As helpers grew older they fed chicks at a faster rate, made more feeding visits and spent more time feeding chicks. Analysis of variance was used to determine which variables explained the variation in the brood feeding rate (amount of food delivered to an entire brood during one observation). Age of chicks had a significant nonlinear effect, and size of brood and number of helpers had significant linear effects on the brood feeding rate. Chicks in groups with helpers received more food and were accompanied for longer periods of time than chicks in groups without helpers; either or both of these factors may have led to increased chick survival. 相似文献
17.
Protandrous hermaphrodites are predicted to change sex from male to female when relative reproductive fitness of females surpasses
that of males. How size at sex transition varies with population, mating group and individual parameters was investigated
for five populations of the protandrous hermaphrodite slipper snail, Crepidula fornicata. The populations varied for density, size distribution, average mating group size and sex ratio. Size at sex-change was correlated
with the population sex ratio. Comparisons of multiple hypotheses revealed that variables predicting the sex of a snail vary
among positions in the mating group. The variables included body size, the relative size of the snail sitting atop the focal
snail and population density. Our data support the conclusions that size at sex-change (and by inference, the size at which
one sex has relatively greater fitness) is not fixed for these hermaphrodites and that individual size, social conditions
and population differences all influence variation in relative fitness. 相似文献
18.
To determine whether life history differences can occur in salt marsh fishes that occupy different habitats within the same
marsh, we compared reproductive allocation in female mummichog (Fundulus heteroclitus) inhabiting creeks and ponds of a coastal salt marsh in southern New Jersey, USA during the spring and summer of 2001 and
2002. Females were collected in phase with the lunar spawning cycle from four sites of each habitat type, and assessed for
gonad-to-body-mass ratio and growth increment. Annual reproductive allocation, expressed as a percent of somatic mass, was
estimated for each site and year from the gonadosomatic indices of individuals collected during each spawning period. Mummichogs
from creeks showed little change in annual reproductive allocation from 2001 to 2002, whereas those inhabiting ponds showed
a significant increase between these years. Seasonal reproductive patterns indicated that pond females cease spawning at least
one lunar cycle earlier than creek fish. While ponds experienced considerably higher maximum summer temperatures than creeks
as well as near-anoxic pre-dawn conditions, neither of these variables explained a significant amount of variation in annual
reproductive allocation. In contrast, annual reproductive allocation of mummichogs in a pond correlated with its flood frequency
in both years of study. Our results suggest that while the length of the spawning season differs in mummichogs inhabiting
marsh creeks and ponds, annual reproductive allocation depends more upon the hydrodynamic conditions of the particular waterbody
than its habitat type per se. 相似文献
19.
This paper presents data on the dispersal patterns and reproductive success of western lowland gorilla females from a long-term study at Mbeli Bai in the Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park, Republic of Congo. We find that female natal and secondary transfer is common. Female immigration rates are negatively related to group size, and emigration rates are positively related to group size, with the net result that larger groups are losing females and smaller groups are gaining females. Furthermore, females transferring between known groups show a preference for significantly smaller groups. However, there is no effect of group size on female reproductive success. Male protection and male quality are considered important in determining female transfer decisions. The case for infanticide is argued and females exhibit strategies that appear to minimise the probability of infanticide following the death of the silverback. Exclusively single-male groups and group formation through female acquisition by solitary males may bias female transfer to lone silverbacks and small groups. The effects of group size on female dispersal and reproductive success are not wholly consistent with an argument for increased foraging costs, and group size effects are more parsimoniously explained by demographic factors. Male protection from intra-group aggression is the most likely factor underlying grouping patterns across gorilla taxa, but differences in population structure and male reproductive strategies may account for inter-specific variation. We stress the need for intra-specific comparisons and more complete data sets on western lowland gorilla feeding behaviour.Communicated by S. Boinski 相似文献
20.
Marja Koski 《Marine Biology》2007,151(5):1785-1798
Feeding, egg production, hatching success and early naupliar development of Calanus finmarchicus were measured in three north Norwegian fjords during a spring bloom dominated by diatoms and the haptophyte Phaeocystis pouchetii. Majority of the copepod diet consisted of diatoms, mainly Thalassiosira spp. and Chaetoceros spp., with clearance rates up to 10 ml ind−1 h−1 for individual algae species/groups. Egg production rates were high, ranging from ca 40 up to 90 eggs f−1 d−1, with a hatching success of 70–85%, and fast naupliar development through the first non-feeding stages. There was no correlation
between the egg or nauplii production and diatom abundance, but the hatching success was slightly negatively correlated with
diatom biomass. However, the overall high reproductive rates suggested that the main food items were not harmful for C. finmarchicus reproduction in the area, although direct chemical measurements were not conducted. The high population egg production (>1,20,000
eggs m−2 d−1) indicated that a large part of the annual reproduction took place during the investigation, which stresses the importance
of diatom-dominated spring phytoplankton bloom for population recruitment of C. finmarchicus in these northern ecosystems. 相似文献