Ecology. Michael Begon. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Michael Begon
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Биология
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119279310
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This guaranteed a near constancy in the number of established, winning plants between 1943 and 1956, accompanied by a variable number of ‘losers’ that not only failed to grow, but usually, in due course, died. Similar patterns can be observed in tree populations. The survival rates, the birth rates and thus the fitnesses of the few established adults are high; those of the many seedlings and saplings are low.

Schematic illustration of asymmetric competition enhances population size regulation in an anemone.

      Source: After Tamm (1956).

      5.8.4 Territoriality

      Territoriality refers to active interference between individuals, such that a more or less exclusive area, the territory, is defended against intruders by a recognizable pattern of behaviour. It is one widespread and important example of asymmetric intraspecific competition.

      territoriality is a contest and regulates population size

Graphs depict the number of territories may increase at higher resource levels. (a) The number of territories occupied by tawny owls, Strix aluco, in a study in Finland tends to increase as the abundance of their vole prey increases, though not significantly, but (b) the proportion of these in which territory holders are successful in breeding increases significantly with prey abundance.

      Source: After Karell et al. (2009).

      benefits and costs of territoriality

Graph depicts the territory sizes occupied by male lions in Zimbabwe decreased as habitat quality increased. Habitat quality was equated with the estimated concentration of the biomass of a wide range of prey species.

      Source: After Loveridge et al. (2015).

      floater? or territory holder?

Graph depicts older individuals hold the territories in a black kite population. The age profile of territory holders and non-territory holding floaters in a black kite, Milvus migrans, population in the Doñana National Park 


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