结论与展望

D. Oro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在整本书中,我一直在寻找经验例子和理论,以处理扰动如何触发社会性动物的行为反馈反应,这些反应如何影响在斑块之间分散的决定,以及分散对复杂的非线性种群动态的后果。显而易见的是,与独居物种相比,社会反馈——尤其是通过模仿而失控的扩散——在这些反应中确实起着重要作用。虽然对贴片的治疗有很多好处,但扰动可能会降低贴片的适用性。当一片土地受到干扰时,群居物种是否表现出与独居物种不同的反应?既然进化选择了最大限度的适应前景,生活在群体中或单独生活的个体将试图避免扰动的有害影响,例如离开斑块。扰动触发的行为机制对于群居物种和独居物种都是相似的:增加信息收集以减少不确定性,并利用这些更新的信息做出关于留下或离开的最佳决策。因此,答案是独居物种和群居物种对扰动表现出相似的反应。然而,这些行为机制的运作方式在群居物种和独居物种之间是相当不同的:在群居物种中,信息是在个体之间共享的,关于何时离开斑块和去哪里的决定不仅使用私人或个人信息,而且主要使用社会信息。最后但并非最不重要的是社会复制,一种以非理性方式复制他人之前决定的趋势。这种社会复制,也被称为从众,可能引发我所说的失控分散:扰动可能随着时间的推移而积累,降低社会群体的弹性,直到达到一个临界点。一旦超过这个阈值,分散的决定就由少数个体主导,这个决定被群体的其他成员以一种自动催化的方式复制....
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Conclusions and Prospects
Throughout the book, I have been searching for empirical examples and theories dealing with how perturbations trigger behavioural feedback responses in social animals, how these responses affect the decision to disperse between patches, and the consequences of dispersal for complex, nonlinear population dynamics. What seems quite clear is that social feedbacks—and especially runaway dispersal by copying—do play an important role in those responses, compared to solitary species. Although philopatry to the patch has many benefits, perturbations may decrease the suitability of this patch. When a patch is perturbed, do social species show different responses than solitary species? Since evolution has selected for maximizing fitness prospects, individuals living either in groups or in solitary will try to avoid the detrimental effects of the perturbation, for instance by leaving the patch. The behavioural mechanisms triggered by perturbations are similar for both social and solitary species: increase of information gathering to reduce uncertainty and the use of this updated information to make optimal decisions about either staying or leaving. Thus, the answer is that solitary and social species show similar responses to perturbations. Nevertheless, the way those behavioural mechanisms operate is rather different between social and solitary species: in the former, information is shared among individuals, and decisions about when to leave the patch and where to go are made not only using private or personal information, but mostly using social information. Last but not least, there is social copying, a trend to copy in a nonrational way what others have decided before. This social copying, also called conformity, may trigger what I termed runaway dispersal: perturbations may accumulate over time, decreasing resilience of the social group until attaining a tipping point. Once this threshold is surpassed, the decision to disperse is led by a few individuals, and this decision is copied by the rest of the group in an autocatalytic way....
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