整个大陆对红袋鼠和西灰袋鼠荫蔽需求的分析

J. Roberts, Graeme Coulson, A. Munn, Michael R. Kearney
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引用次数: 9

摘要

觅食时间可能受到包括天气在内的一系列现象的限制,这些现象可以限制物种的活动和能量摄入。这被认为是许多物种的关键,它们的分布已知与气候相关,包括袋鼠,尽管这种影响很少被量化。我们探讨了两种近亲袋鼠——红袋鼠(Macropus rufus)和西灰袋鼠(M. fuliginosus)——在寻找阴凉(一种体温调节行为)方面的差异,如何反映它们在澳大利亚分布的差异。我们观察了袋鼠在野外的觅食和寻找阴凉的行为,并结合当地的天气观测,计算了阈值辐射温度(基于太阳和红外辐射热负荷),超过这个温度,袋鼠就会撤退到阴凉处。我们将这些计算出的容忍阈值应用于每小时的小气候估计,这些小气候估计来自每日网格化的天气数据,以预测澳大利亚大陆10年期间的活动限制。M. rufus比M. rufus在树荫下待的时间更长(7.6±0.7 h比6.4±0.9 h),觅食时间更长(11.8±0.5 h比10.0±0.6 h),尽管总休息时间相当(~ 8.2 h)。M. rufus比M. rufus耐受的辐射温度高19°C(89°C比70°C)。在整个澳大利亚,我们预测M. fuliginosus比M. rufus更局限于遮荫,在更北的地方有更高的绝对遮荫需求。这些结果证实了先前的发现,即M. rufus比M. fuliginosus更擅长处理热量,并表明M. rufus在大陆尺度上对阴影的依赖程度较低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A continent-wide analysis of the shade requirements of red and western grey kangaroos
ABSTRACT Foraging time may be constrained by a suite of phenomena including weather, which can restrict a species' activity and energy intake. This is recognized as pivotal for many species whose distributions are known to correlate with climate, including kangaroos, although such impacts are rarely quantified. We explore how differences in shade seeking, a thermoregulatory behavior, of 2 closely-related kangaroo species, Macropus rufus (red kangaroos) and M. fuliginosus (western grey kangaroos), might reflect differences in their distributions across Australia. We observed foraging and shade-seeking behavior in the field and, together with local weather observations, calculated threshold radiant temperatures (based on solar and infrared radiant heat loads) over which the kangaroos retreated to shade. We apply these calculated tolerance thresholds to hourly microclimatic estimates derived from daily-gridded weather data to predict activity constraints across the Australian continent over a 10-year period. M. fuliginosus spent more time than M. rufus in the shade (7.6 ± 0.7 h versus 6.4 ± 0.9 h) and more time foraging (11.8 ± 0.5 h vs. 10.0 ± 0.6 h), although total time resting was equivalent (∼8.2 h). M. rufus tolerated 19°C higher radiant temperatures than M. fuliginosus (89°C versus 70°C radiant temperature). Across Australia, we predicted M. fuliginosus to be more restricted to shade than M. rufus, with higher absolute shade requirements farther north. These results corroborate previous findings that M. rufus is more adept at dealing with heat than M. fuliginosus and indicate that M. rufus is less dependent on shade on a continental scale.
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