Extinction Dynamics in the American Marten (Martes americana)
We constructed a model of marten population dynamics and used it to investigate extinction processes across a wide range of parameter values. The model was based on rules governing the behavior and physiology of individual martens and focused on energy balance. Spatial dynamics and demographic and e...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Conservation biology 1994-12, Vol.8 (4), p.1058-1068 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We constructed a model of marten population dynamics and used it to investigate extinction processes across a wide range of parameter values. The model was based on rules governing the behavior and physiology of individual martens and focused on energy balance. Spatial dynamics and demographic and environmental stochasticity were incorporated. The outcome was the probability of extinction and quasiextinction (20 females remaining) over 500 years. Three qualitative forms of extinction were delineated. The first was deterministic extinction, associated with those parameter combinations leading to a negative population growth rate. The second was probabilistic extinction in systems with a strong positive growth rate but restricted population size due to habitat constraint. The transition from 100% persistence to 100% quasiextinction, as the input habitat size was decreased, was abrupt. The final form of extinction was in systems with a growth rate of approximately zero. Prey availability maintained an upper limit on these populations, but otherwise fluctuations in population size were essentially random, leading to nontrivial probabilities of extinction in even relatively large populations. A number of issues requiring further empirical research were identified. These included the relationship between habitat quality and marten reproduction, dispersal patterns and dispersal mortality, the effect of habitat edge on marten reproduction and mortality, and the characterization of the severity and frequency of catastrophic mortality as experienced by marten populations. |
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ISSN: | 0888-8892 1523-1739 |
DOI: | 10.1046/j.1523-1739.1994.08041058.x |