Thông tin tài liệu


Nhan đề : Joint effects of habitat heterogeneity and species' life-history traints on population dynamics in spatially structured landscapes
Tác giả: Ye, Xinping
Năm xuất bản : 2014
Trích dẫn : PLoS ONEVol.9 (2014), No.9, article e107742, 10 p
Tóm tắt : Both habitat heterogeneity and species’ life-history traits play important roles in driving population dynamics, yet there is little scientific consensus around the combined effect of these two factors on populations in complex landscapes. Using a spatially explicit agent-based model, we explored how interactions between habitat spatial structure (defined here as the scale of spatial autocorrelation in habitat quality) and species life-history strategies (defined here by species environmental tolerance and movement capacity) affect population dynamics in spatially heterogeneous landscapes. We compared the responses of four hypothetical species with different life-history traits to four landscape scenarios differing in the scale of spatial autocorrelation in habitat quality. The results showed that the population size of all hypothetical species exhibited a substantial increase as the scale of spatial autocorrelation in habitat quality increased, yet the pattern of population increase was shaped by species’ movement capacity. The increasing scale of spatial autocorrelation in habitat quality promoted the resource share of individuals, but had little effect on the mean mortality rate of individuals. Species’ movement capacity also determined the proportion of individuals in high-quality cells as well as the proportion of individuals experiencing competition in response to increased spatial autocorrelation in habitat quality. Positive correlations between the resource share of individuals and the proportion of individuals experiencing competition indicate that large-scale spatial autocorrelation in habitat quality may mask the density-dependent effect on populations through increasing the resource share of individuals, especially for species with low mobility. These findings suggest that low-mobility species may be more sensitive to habitat spatial heterogeneity in spatially structured landscapes.
URI: http://tailieuso.tlu.edu.vn/handle/DHTL/4779
Nguồn trực tuyến: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0107742#abstract0
Trong bộ sưu tập: Tài liệu mở
XEM MÔ TẢ

58

XEM & TẢI

0

Danh sách tệp tin đính kèm:
Hiện tại không có tệp tin đính kèm tới tài liệu.

Bạn đọc là cán bộ, giáo viên, sinh viên của Trường Đại học Thuỷ Lợi cần đăng nhập để Xem trực tuyến/Tải về



Khi sử dụng tài liệu trong thư viện số bạn đọc phải tuân thủ đầy đủ luật bản quyền.