Density Dependence of Egg Recruitment and Moth Dispersal in Spruce Budworms

被引:23
|
作者
Regniere, Jacques [1 ]
Nealis, Vincent G. [2 ]
机构
[1] Canadian Forest Serv, Nat Resources Canada, 1055 PEPS St, Quebec City, PQ G1V 4C7, Canada
[2] Canadian Forest Serv, Nat Resources Canada, 506 Burnside Rd West, Victoria, BC V8Z 1M5, Canada
关键词
spruce budworm; forest protection; early intervention strategy; egg recruitment; apparent fecundity; growth rate; SPATIAL SYNCHRONY; POPULATION-DYNAMICS; NEW-BRUNSWICK; OUTBREAKS; LEPIDOPTERA; FOREST; MECHANISMS;
D O I
10.3390/f10080706
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Egg recruitment quantifies the relative importance of realized fecundity and migration rates in the population dynamics of highly mobile insects. We develop here a formal context upon which to base the measurement and interpretation of egg recruitment in population dynamics of eastern and western spruce budworms, two geographically separated species that share a very similar ecology. Under most circumstances, per capita egg recruitment rates in these budworms are higher in low-density populations and lower in high-density populations, relative to the regional mean: Low-density populations are nearly always migration sinks for gravid moths, and dense populations nearly always sources. The slope of this relationship, measured on a log scale, is negatively correlated with migration rate, and ranges between 0 and -1. The steeper the slope, the more marked net migration. Using our western spruce budworm observations, we found strong evidence of density-dependent emigration in budworms, so migration is not simply a random perturbation in the lagged, density-dependent stochastic process leading to budworm outbreaks. It is itself statistically and biologically density-dependent. Therefore, moth migration is a synchronizing factor and a spread mechanism that is essential to understanding the development and expansion of spruce budworm outbreaks at regional scales in the boreal forests of North America.
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页数:16
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