欧亚猞猁在人类主导的欧洲景观中的生存。

IF 5.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
J Premier, M L Bastianelli, J Oeser, O Anders, H Andren, M Aronsson, G Bagrade, E Belotti, C Breitenmoser-Würsten, L Bufka, R Černe, J Červený, N Drouet-Hoguet, M Ďuľa, C Fuxjäger, M Herdtfelder, L Hočevar, W Jędrzejewski, R Kont, P Koubek, R Kowalczyk, M Krofel, J Krojerová-Prokešová, J Kubala, J Kusak, M Kutal, J D C Linnell, J Mattisson, T L Middelhoff, D Melovski, A Molinari-Jobin, J Odden, H Okarma, A Ornicāns, N Pagon, J Persson, K Schmidt, M Sindičić, V Slijepčević, B Tám, F Zimmermann, S Kramer-Schadt, M Heurich
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引用次数: 0

摘要

存活率和特定原因死亡率对于基于证据的种群预测和保护至关重要,特别是对于大型食肉动物而言,它们的种群往往容易受到人为死亡的影响。因此,了解人为死亡原因和自然死亡原因之间的关系,以评估它们是相加性的还是代偿性的,是很重要的。此外,生存与环境协变量之间的关系可以揭示特定景观特征是否影响人口统计学表现。我们使用了681只欧亚猞猁(猞猁)的遥测数据,追踪了它们在欧洲的分布。通过时间-事件分析,我们试图确定与他们生存差异相关的变量。非法捕杀是死亡的主要原因(33.8%),受保护种群和被猎杀种群的死亡率相似(分别为每年8.6%和7.0%)。不同种群的存活率差异很大(每年70-95%)。在所有的研究地点,较高的狩猎和人为死亡率被其他原因较低的死亡率部分补偿,但不是单纯的自然死亡率。存活率的变化取决于性别(雌性存活率是雄性存活率的1.5倍)和季节(狩猎季节和冬季的风险最高),而较低的存活率与人类在粗(栖息地组成)和细(栖息地利用)尺度上对景观的高度修改相关。生存的一些变化是由未观察到的因素造成的,考虑到包括非法杀戮在内的人为死亡率很高,这些因素是最令人关切的。由于受保护和狩猎种群的自然死亡率较低,我们得出结论,人为死亡原因可能接近于加法,因此维持或增加庇护所栖息地,减少人为干扰对猞猁的保护至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Survival of Eurasian lynx in the human-dominated landscape of Europe.

Survival and cause-specific mortality rates are vital for evidence-based population forecasting and conservation, particularly for large carnivores, whose populations are often vulnerable to human-caused mortalities. It is therefore important to know the relationship between anthropogenic and natural mortality causes to evaluate whether they are additive or compensatory. Further, the relation between survival and environmental covariates could reveal whether specific landscape characteristics influence demographic performance. We used telemetry data on 681 Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx), a model apex predator with large spatial requirements, that were tracked across their European distribution. Through time-to-event analyses, we sought to determine the variables associated with differences in their survival. Illegal killing was the main cause of mortality (33.8%), and mortality rates were similar in protected and hunted populations (8.6% and 7.0% per year, respectively). Survival varied greatly across populations (70-95% per year). Across all study sites, higher hunting and anthropogenic mortality rates were partially compensated by lower rates of other mortality causes but not by natural mortality alone. Variation in survival depended on sex (female survival was 1.5 times greater than male survival) and seasonality (highest risk during hunting season and winter), and lower survival rates were correlated with higher human modification of landscapes at both coarse (home range composition) and fine (habitat use within home range) scales. Some variation in survival was driven by unobserved factors, which, given the high rates of human-caused mortalities, including illegal killing, are of foremost concern. Due to the low natural mortality rates in protected and hunted populations, we conclude that anthropogenic causes of mortality are likely close to additive, such that maintaining or increasing refuge habitat with little human disturbance is critical to lynx conservation.

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来源期刊
Conservation Biology
Conservation Biology 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
12.70
自引率
3.20%
发文量
175
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Conservation Biology welcomes submissions that address the science and practice of conserving Earth's biological diversity. We encourage submissions that emphasize issues germane to any of Earth''s ecosystems or geographic regions and that apply diverse approaches to analyses and problem solving. Nevertheless, manuscripts with relevance to conservation that transcend the particular ecosystem, species, or situation described will be prioritized for publication.
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