首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Spatial variation in adult sex ratio across multiple scales in the invasive golden apple snail,Pomacea canaliculata
Authors:Meng Xu  Miao Fang  Yexin Yang  Jaimie T. A. Dick  Hongmei Song  Du Luo  Xidong Mu  Dangen Gu  Jianren Luo  Yinchang Hu
Affiliation:1. Pearl River Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences/Key Laboratory of Tropical and Subtropical Fishery Resource Application and Cultivation, Ministry of Agriculture, Guangzhou, China;2. College of Fisheries and Life Science, Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai, China;3. Institute for Global Food Security, School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK
Abstract:Adult sex ratio (ASR) has critical effects on behavior and life history and has implications for population demography, including the invasiveness of introduced species. ASR exhibits immense variation in nature, yet the scale dependence of this variation is rarely analyzed. In this study, using the generalized multilevel models, we investigated the variation in ASR across multiple nested spatial scales and analyzed the underlying causes for an invasive species, the golden apple snail Pomacea canaliculata. We partitioned the variance in ASR to describe the variations at different scales and then included the explanatory variables at the individual and group levels to analyze the potential causes driving the variation in ASR. We firstly determined there is a significant female‐biased ASR for this species when accounting for the spatial and temporal autocorrelations of sampling. We found that, counter to nearly equal distributed variation at plot, habitat and region levels, ASR showed little variation at the town level. Temperature and precipitation at the region level were significantly positively associated with ASR, whereas the individual weight, the density characteristic, and sampling time were not significant factors influencing ASR. Our study suggests that offspring sex ratio of this species may shape the general pattern of ASR in the population level while the environmental variables at the region level translate the unbiased offspring sex ratio to the female‐biased ASR. Future research should consider the implications of climate warming on the female‐biased ASR of this invasive species and thus on invasion pattern.
Keywords:Adult sex ratio  generalized multilevel model  nested spatial scales     Pomacea canaliculata     variance components
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号