Land-use changes influence climate resilience through altered population demography in a social insect

IF 7.1 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecological Monographs Pub Date : 2024-11-22 DOI:10.1002/ecm.1638
Shih-Fan Chan, Dustin R. Rubenstein, Tsung-Wei Wang, Ying-Yu Chen, I-Ching Chen, Dong-Zheng Ni, Wei-Kai Shih, Sheng-Feng Shen
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Abstract

Biodiversity is threatened by both climate and land-use change. However, the synergistic impacts of these stressors and the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. This study seeks to bridge this knowledge gap by testing two competing hypotheses regarding the concept of the realized thermal niche. The Fixed Niche Breadth hypothesis suggests that a species' thermal niche remains constant despite fluctuations in population density resulting from land-use changes. This hypothesis links habitat loss directly to a reduced availability of suitable climate. Conversely, the Habitat Loss-Allee Effect hypothesis posits that land-use changes narrow the realized thermal niche by lowering population densities, which impairs individual fitness in unfavorable temperatures due to the Allee effect—the positive impact of higher population density on individual fitness. To investigate these hypotheses, we developed an individual-based model that integrates the Allee effect to examine how climate and land-use changes affect population density and the thermal niche in social organisms. We empirically tested our model predictions by studying the distribution and cooperative behavior of burying beetles (Nicrophorus nepalensis), which compete with blowflies for carrion resources, along two elevational gradients in Taiwan. These gradients serve as temperature gradients, one in an intact forest and the other in a human-altered landscape with substantial forest loss. Our results support the model predictions and show that landscape forest loss reduces beetle population densities and disrupts their dispersal dynamics, resulting in smaller cooperative groups. This, in turn, limits the beetles' ability to compete with blowflies in warmer environments, resulting in a contraction of the realized thermal niche. Together, our findings support the Habitat Loss-Allee Effect hypothesis while rejecting the Fixed Niche Breadth hypothesis. By highlighting the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on both intra- and interspecific social interactions, our study improves understanding of species' vulnerability to the combined threats of climate and land-use change. Ultimately, our results underscore the importance of considering the demographic and behavioral consequences of land-use change when assessing species' vulnerability to climate-land-use synergies.
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土地利用变化通过改变社会昆虫的人口结构影响气候适应能力
生物多样性受到气候和土地利用变化的双重威胁。然而,人们对这些压力因素的协同影响及其内在机制仍然知之甚少。本研究试图通过检验有关已实现的热生态位概念的两个相互竞争的假说来弥补这一知识空白。固定壁龛广度假说认为,尽管土地利用变化导致种群密度波动,但物种的热壁龛仍保持不变。这一假说将栖息地丧失与适宜气候的减少直接联系起来。与此相反,栖息地丧失-阿利效应假说认为,土地利用的变化会降低种群密度,从而缩小已实现的热生态位,由于阿利效应(较高的种群密度对个体适应性的积极影响),在不利的温度条件下会损害个体适应性。为了研究这些假设,我们开发了一个基于个体的模型,该模型综合了阿利效应,以研究气候和土地利用变化如何影响社会生物的种群密度和热生态位。我们通过研究埋甲虫(Nicrophorus nepalensis)在台湾两个海拔梯度上的分布和合作行为,检验了我们的模型预测。这两个梯度是温度梯度,一个位于完整的森林中,另一个位于森林大量消失的人为改变的地貌中。我们的研究结果支持模型的预测,并表明景观森林的消失降低了甲虫的种群密度,破坏了它们的扩散动态,导致合作群体的规模变小。这反过来又限制了甲虫在温暖环境中与吹蝇竞争的能力,导致实现的热生态位收缩。总之,我们的研究结果支持了 "栖息地丧失-近亲效应 "假说,同时否定了 "固定壁龛广度 "假说。通过强调栖息地丧失和破碎化对种内和种间社会互动的影响,我们的研究加深了人们对物种在气候和土地利用变化共同威胁下脆弱性的理解。最终,我们的研究结果强调了在评估物种对气候-土地利用协同作用的脆弱性时,考虑土地利用变化的人口和行为后果的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Ecological Monographs
Ecological Monographs 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
12.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
61
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The vision for Ecological Monographs is that it should be the place for publishing integrative, synthetic papers that elaborate new directions for the field of ecology. Original Research Papers published in Ecological Monographs will continue to document complex observational, experimental, or theoretical studies that by their very integrated nature defy dissolution into shorter publications focused on a single topic or message. Reviews will be comprehensive and synthetic papers that establish new benchmarks in the field, define directions for future research, contribute to fundamental understanding of ecological principles, and derive principles for ecological management in its broadest sense (including, but not limited to: conservation, mitigation, restoration, and pro-active protection of the environment). Reviews should reflect the full development of a topic and encompass relevant natural history, observational and experimental data, analyses, models, and theory. Reviews published in Ecological Monographs should further blur the boundaries between “basic” and “applied” ecology. Concepts and Synthesis papers will conceptually advance the field of ecology. These papers are expected to go well beyond works being reviewed and include discussion of new directions, new syntheses, and resolutions of old questions. In this world of rapid scientific advancement and never-ending environmental change, there needs to be room for the thoughtful integration of scientific ideas, data, and concepts that feeds the mind and guides the development of the maturing science of ecology. Ecological Monographs provides that room, with an expansive view to a sustainable future.
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