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DOI10.1002/ece3.5118
Changes in behavior are unable to disrupt a trophic cascade involving a specialist herbivore and its food plant
Lohman, Madeleine G.1; Riecke, Thomas V.1,2; Acevedo, Cheyenne R.1; Person, Brian T.3; Schmutz, Joel A.4; Uher-Koch, Brian D.4; Sedinger, James S.1
发表日期2019
ISSN2045-7758
卷号9期号:9页码:5281-5291
英文摘要

Changes in ecological conditions can induce changes in behavior and demography of wild organisms, which in turn may influence population dynamics. Black brant (Branta bernicla nigricans) nesting in colonies on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (YKD) in western Alaska have declined substantially (50%) since the turn of the century. Black brant are herbivores that rely heavily on Carex subspathacea (Hoppner's sedge) during growth and development. The availability of C. subspathacea affects gosling growth rates, which subsequently affect pre- and postfledging survival, as well as size and breeding probability as an adult. We predicted that long-term declines in C. subspathacea have affected gosling growth rates, despite the potential of behavior to buffer changes in food availability during brood rearing. We used Bayesian hierarchical mixed-effects models to examine long-term (1987-2015) shifts in brant behavior during brood rearing, forage availability, and gosling growth rates at the Tutakoke River colony. We showed that locomotion behaviors have increased (beta = 0.05, 95% CRI: 0.032-0.068) while resting behaviors have decreased (beta = -0.024, 95% CRI: -0.041 to -0.007), potentially in response to long-term shifts in forage availability and brood density. Concurrently, gosling growth rates have decreased substantially (beta = -0.100, 95% CRI: -0.191 to -0.016) despite shifts in behavior, mirroring long-term declines in the abundance of C. subspathacea (beta = -0.191, 95% CRI: -0.355 to -0.032). These results have important implications for individual fitness and population viability, where shifts in gosling behavior putatively fail to mitigate long-term declines in forage availability.


WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Evolutionary Biology
来源期刊ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/97275
作者单位1.Univ Nevada, Dept Nat Resources & Environm Sci, Reno, NV 89557 USA;
2.Univ Nevada, Program Ecol Evolut & Conservat Biol, Reno, NV 89557 USA;
3.North Slope Borough, Dept Wildlife Management, Barrow, AK USA;
4.US Geol Survey, Alaska Sci Ctr, Anchorage, AK USA
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Lohman, Madeleine G.,Riecke, Thomas V.,Acevedo, Cheyenne R.,et al. Changes in behavior are unable to disrupt a trophic cascade involving a specialist herbivore and its food plant[J],2019,9(9):5281-5291.
APA Lohman, Madeleine G..,Riecke, Thomas V..,Acevedo, Cheyenne R..,Person, Brian T..,Schmutz, Joel A..,...&Sedinger, James S..(2019).Changes in behavior are unable to disrupt a trophic cascade involving a specialist herbivore and its food plant.ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION,9(9),5281-5291.
MLA Lohman, Madeleine G.,et al."Changes in behavior are unable to disrupt a trophic cascade involving a specialist herbivore and its food plant".ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 9.9(2019):5281-5291.
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