弗兰肯斯坦矩阵:人口生活史变异影响人口模型的可靠性和预测。

IF 3.5 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Giacomo Rosa, Benedikt R Schmidt, Jean-Paul Léna, Benjamin Monod-Broca, Leonardo Vignoli, Emilie Tournier, Eric Bonnaire, Holger Buschmann, Thierry Kinet, Arnaud Laudelout, Remi Fonters, Carlo Biancardi, Anna R Di Cerbo, Dominique Langlois, Jean-Marc Thirion, Lucy Morin, Julian Pichenot, Julien Moquet, Hugo Cayuela, Stefano Canessa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

种群矩阵模型通常用于研究野生种群的人口统计和指导管理选择。当特定种群或生活史阶段的生命率未知时,研究人员通常用同一物种的其他种群的估计值来代替它们。这种“混合”矩阵可能会忽略种群间的生活史变化,从而导致不正确的推断。在这项研究中,我们使用黄腹蟾蜍(bomina variegata)种群的大型数据集,研究了使用混合矩阵对人口统计推断和管理决策的实际影响。黄腹蟾蜍是一种两栖动物物种,其生活史取决于人类的土地利用。我们估计了不同生境类型的18个种群的阶段特异性生存和招募。然后,我们评估了当随机选择或基于栖息地、人口统计学或地理邻近性的其他人口的估计值取代特定人口的生命率时,估计的人口增长率和弹性是如何变化的。使用混合矩阵混合来自不同种群和栖息地的人口统计估计有偏见的预测。即使在所有人群中随机抽样,平均偏差也相对较小,因为我们的大数据集代表了整个生活史范围,平均误差被抵消了。然而,从地理上接近或人口统计学上相似的人群中借用估计数大大减少了极端错误的风险。借鉴类似生境类型的种群也可以减少偏差,但结果因所涉及的确切生境类型而异。我们的研究说明了生活史中种群的栖息地特异性变化如何影响进化人口学、生态学和保护中常用的种群矩阵的可靠性。当无法避免使用混合种群矩阵时,可以根据有关生态或人口模式的额外信息来创建它们,从而有助于减少偏见。当没有这样的信息时,我们建议研究应该考虑参数估计的整个空间(可用估计的完整范围),从而透明地描述围绕人口估计的真实不确定性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Frankenstein matrices: Among-population life history variation affects the reliability and predictions of demographic models.

Population matrix models are routinely used to study the demography of wild populations and to guide management choices. When vital rates are unknown for a specific population or life history stage, researchers often replace them with estimates from other populations of the same species. Such 'hybrid' matrices might ignore among-population life history variation and lead to incorrect inferences. In this study, we examined the real-world effect of using hybrid matrices on demographic inference and management decisions, using a large dataset on yellow-bellied toad (Bombina variegata) populations, an amphibian species whose life history depends on human land use. We estimated stage-specific survival and recruitment for 18 populations across different habitat types. We then assessed how estimated population growth rates and elasticities changed when population-specific vital rates were replaced by estimates from other populations, chosen randomly or based on habitat, demographic or geographic proximity. The use of hybrid matrices mixing demographic estimates from different populations and habitats biased predictions. The mean bias was relatively minor even when sampling randomly across all populations, because our large dataset represented the whole range of life histories and errors cancelled out on average. However, borrowing estimates from geographically close or demographically similar populations substantially reduced the risk of extreme errors. Borrowing from populations from similar habitat types could also reduce bias, but results varied depending on the exact habitat types concerned. Our study illustrates how habitat-specific among-population variation in life history affects the reliability of population matrices commonly used in evolutionary demography, ecology and conservation. When the use of hybrid population matrices cannot be avoided, their creation can be informed by additional information about ecological or demographic patterns, helping reduce bias. When such information is not available, we recommend that studies should consider the whole space of parameter estimates (the complete range of estimates available), thus transparently describing the true uncertainty surrounding demographic estimates.

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来源期刊
Journal of Animal Ecology
Journal of Animal Ecology 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
4.20%
发文量
188
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Animal Ecology publishes the best original research on all aspects of animal ecology, ranging from the molecular to the ecosystem level. These may be field, laboratory and theoretical studies utilising terrestrial, freshwater or marine systems.
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