気候極端現象が動物社会に与える影響を解明(How do climate extremes alter animal societies?)

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2026-05-06 マックス・プランク研究所

Max Planck Societyの研究チームは、熱波や干ばつ、豪雨などの極端気象が動物社会の構造や行動に与える影響を分析した。研究では、多様な動物種の長期観測データを比較し、気候変動による環境ストレスが群れ形成、繁殖、協力行動、移動パターンに大きな変化をもたらすことを示した。例えば、資源不足時には群れ内競争が激化し、社会的つながりが弱まる一方、一部の種では協力関係を強化して生存率を高める適応行動も確認された。また、極端気象は繁殖成功率の低下や若齢個体の死亡率上昇を引き起こし、生態系全体の安定性にも影響する可能性がある。研究者らは、従来の生態学では個体数変化に注目することが多かったが、社会構造そのものの変化を理解することが、気候変動下での種の存続予測に重要だと指摘している。今回の成果は、動物行動学や保全生態学に新たな視点を提供し、生物多様性保全戦略の高度化につながると期待される。

<関連情報>

環境変動は、社会性霊長類の集団規模の競争上のトレードオフを変化させる Environmental fluctuations alter the competitive trade-offs of group size in a social primate

Odd T. Jacobson,Margaret C. Crofoot,Genevieve E. Finerty,Susan E. Perry & Brendan J. Barrett
Nature Ecology Evolution  Published:06 May 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-026-03048-8

気候極端現象が動物社会に与える影響を解明(How do climate extremes alter animal societies?)

Abstract

Larger animal groups are widely understood to require more space and expend more energy to mitigate the foraging costs of within-group competition. Yet between-group interactions and shifting resource distributions can obscure links between group size and behaviour, making responses to demographic change difficult to predict. Here, using 33 years of observational data from 12 neighbouring white-faced capuchin (Cebus imitator) groups in Costa Rica, combined with remotely sensed environmental data, we show that within- and between-group competition jointly shape space use, with their relative importance shifting with seasonal and interannual climate cycles. Larger groups compensated for reduced per capita foraging efficiency by expanding into less-exploited areas over longer timescales rather than increasing daily travel. Notably, this expansion disproportionately encroached on smaller neighbouring groups. In the dry season, resource confinement to riparian zones increased intergroup encounters and reduced overlap, with larger groups occupying the highest-quality areas. Climatic extremes linked to El Niño and La Niña exacerbated within-group foraging costs for large groups, whereas intermediate anomalies relaxed these constraints and amplified the benefits of between-group competitive ability. Our findings show that environmental variation shifts the trade-offs of within- and between-group competition, shaping how group-living animals adjust to changing social and ecological conditions.

生物環境工学
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