EXTINCTION, COLONIZATION, AND METAPOPULATIONS - ENVIRONMENTAL TRACKING BY RARE SPECIES

被引:216
作者
THOMAS, CD
机构
[1] School of Biological Sciences, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1523-1739.1994.08020373.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Extinction and metapopulation theories emphasize that stochastic fluctuations in local populations cause extinction and that local extinctions generate empty habitat patches that are then available for recolonization. Metapopulation persistence depends on the balance of extinction and colonization in a static environment. For many rare and declining species, I argue (1) that extinction is usually the deterministic consequence of the local environment becoming unsuitable (through habitat loss or modification, introduction of a predator, etc.); (2) that the local environment usually remains unsuitable following local extinction, so extinctions only rarely generate empty patches of suitable habitat; and (3) that colonization usually follows improvement of the local environment for a particular species (or long-distance transfer by humans). Thus, persistence depends predominantly on whether organisms are able to track the shifting spatial mosaic of suitable environmental conditions or on maintainance of good conditions locally.
引用
收藏
页码:373 / 378
页数:6
相关论文
empty
未找到相关数据