Using mechanistic insights to predict the climate-induced expansion of a key aquatic predator

IF 7.1 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecological Monographs Pub Date : 2023-04-16 DOI:10.1002/ecm.1575
Mark C. Urban, Christopher P. Nadeau, Sean T. Giery
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Ameliorating the impacts of climate change on communities requires understanding the mechanisms of change and applying them to predict future responses. One way to prioritize efforts is to identify biotic multipliers, which are species that are sensitive to climate change and disproportionately alter communities. We first evaluate the mechanisms underlying the occupancy dynamics of marbled salamanders, a key predator in temporary ponds in the eastern United States We use long-term data to evaluate four mechanistic hypotheses proposed to explain occupancy patterns, including autumn flooding, overwintering predation, freezing, and winterkill from oxygen depletion. Results suggest that winterkill and fall flooding best explain marbled salamander occupancy patterns. A field introduction experiment supports the importance of winterkill via hypoxia rather than freezing in determining overwinter survival and rejects dispersal limitation as a mechanism preventing establishment. We build climate-based correlative models that describe salamander occupancy across ponds and years at two latitudinally divergent sites, a southern and middle site, with and without field-collected habitat characteristics. Correlative models with climate and habitat variation described occupancy patterns better than climate-only models for each site, but poorly predicted occupancy patterns at the site not used for model development. We next built hybrid mechanistic metapopulation occupancy models that incorporated flooding and winterkill mechanisms. Although hybrid models did not describe observed site-specific occupancy dynamics better than correlative models, they better predicted the other site's dynamics, revealing a performance trade-off between model types. Under future climate scenarios, models predict an increased occupancy of marbled salamanders, especially at the middle site, and expansion at a northern site beyond the northern range boundary. Evidence for the climate sensitivity of marbled salamanders combined with their disproportionate ecological impacts suggests that they might act as biotic multipliers of climate change in temporary ponds. More generally, we predict that top aquatic vertebrate predators will expand into temperate-boreal lakes as climate change reduces winterkill worldwide. Predaceous species with life histories sensitive to winter temperatures provide good candidates for identifying additional biotic multipliers. Building models that include biological mechanisms for key species such as biotic multipliers could better predict broad changes in communities and design effective conservation actions.

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利用机制见解预测气候引起的一种关键水生捕食者的扩张
减轻气候变化对社区的影响需要了解变化的机制,并将其应用于预测未来的反应。确定工作重点的一种方法是确定生物增殖器,这些物种对气候变化敏感,对群落的影响不成比例。我们首先评估了美国东部临时池塘中主要捕食者——石纹蝾螈占据动态的机制。我们使用长期数据评估了四种解释占据模式的机制假设,包括秋季洪水、越冬捕食、冻结和缺氧致冬杀。结果表明,冬杀和秋季洪水最能解释大理石纹蝾螈的占据模式。一项野外引种试验支持了通过缺氧而不是冰冻来决定越冬存活的重要性,并否定了将扩散限制作为阻止成虫的机制。我们建立了基于气候的相关模型,描述了两个纬度不同的地点(南部和中部)的蝾螈在池塘和年份上的占用情况,有和没有实地收集的栖息地特征。考虑气候和生境变化的相关模型比仅考虑气候的模型更能描述每个样地的占用模式,但对未用于模型开发的样地的占用模式预测较差。接下来,我们建立了包含洪水和冬杀机制的混合机制元种群占用模型。虽然混合模型不能比相关模型更好地描述观测到的特定地点的占用动态,但它们能更好地预测其他地点的动态,揭示了模型类型之间的性能权衡。在未来的气候情景下,模型预测大理石纹蝾螈的占用会增加,特别是在中部地区,并在北部地区扩展到北部范围边界以外的北部地区。大理石纹蝾螈对气候敏感的证据,加上它们不成比例的生态影响,表明它们可能在临时池塘中充当气候变化的生物倍增器。更普遍地说,我们预测,随着气候变化在全球范围内减少冬杀,顶级水生脊椎动物捕食者将扩展到温带北方湖泊。具有对冬季温度敏感的生活史的食肉物种为鉴定额外的生物倍增器提供了良好的候选者。建立包括生物倍增器等关键物种的生物机制的模型可以更好地预测群落的广泛变化并设计有效的保护行动。
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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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