麻豆淫院


Researchers demonstrate relationship between predation and extinction in small populations

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- Two ecological issues of increasing concern are the conservation of threatened and endangered species and the management of invasive species. A study by University of Georgia Odum School of Ecology postdoctoral researcher Andrew M. Kramer and associate professor John M. Drake has important implications for both.

Their paper shows, for the first time, experimental confirmation that predation can accelerate in small populations. Published in a recent issue of the Journal of Animal Ecology, the article also was the featured in the journal鈥檚 "In Focus" section.

Kramer explained that there is a relationship between a population鈥檚 density and its fitness, or ability to grow and thrive. Small populations can experience positive density dependence, which means that as density rises, so does fitness; as density decreases, the population鈥檚 growth rate decreases as well. When this relationship is particularly strong, the population growth rate not only slows but actually becomes negative - which can lead to the extinction of the entire population.

Until now there has not been experimental evidence of such positive density dependence caused entirely by predation. For example, individuals in a small, low-density population may have difficulty finding a mate, which also can affect that population鈥檚 growth rate. Earlier studies have not been able to separate the various potential drivers of changes in populations. Kramer and Drake designed their experiment to ensure that predation was the sole possible mechanism that could induce this result.

Kramer and Drake established 56 populations of different sizes of the small aquatic crustacean Daphnia magna. They selected this species as the experimental prey because it reproduces asexually and practices no social cooperation, eliminating those potential mechanisms for a decrease in population growth. They then introduced Chaoborus trivittatus and Chaoborus punctipennis as predators into half of the experimental populations. Their results were consistent with models that predicted that low population density combined with the presence of predators would lead to the highest extinction rates.

Stephen D. Gregory and Franck Courchamp, in their 鈥淚n Focus鈥 article about Kramer and Drake鈥檚 research, refer to the finding that predation can lead to extinction of low-density populations as 鈥渄ouble-edged.鈥 Kramer agreed. 鈥淚t depends on your perspective,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f your goal is the eradication of an , these results could offer some good news. But if you are trying to conserve a threatened or endangered species, the news is not too encouraging. It is clear, however, that we need to look more closely at predators and small populations if our goal is species conservation.鈥

Provided by University of Georgia

Citation: Researchers demonstrate relationship between predation and extinction in small populations (2010, September 3) retrieved 20 June 2025 from /news/2010-09-relationship-predation-extinction-small-populations.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Extinction rates and causes studied

0 shares

Feedback to editors