Climate change can disrupt ecological interactions in mysterious ways: Using ecological generalists to forecast community-wide effects

Francisco E. Fontúrbel , Roberto F. Nespolo , Guillermo C. Amico , David M. Watson
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Ecological interactions are the backbone of biodiversity. Like individual species, interactions are threatened by drivers of biodiversity loss, among which climate change operates at a broader scale and can exacerbate the effects of land-use change, overharvesting, and invasive species. As temperature increases, we expect that some species may alter their distribution towards more amenable conditions. However, a warmer and drier climate may impose local effects on plants and animals, disrupting their interactions before noticeable changes in distribution are observed. We used a mutualistic trio from the temperate forests of South America to theoretically illustrate how climate change can disrupt ecological interactions, based on our current knowledge on this system. This study system comprises three generalist species with intersecting roles: a keystone mistletoe, a pollinator hummingbird, and a frugivorous marsupial that disperses the seeds of many species. On the one hand, drought causes water stress, increasing mortality of both mistletoe and host plants, and reducing the production of flowers and fruits. These resource shortages negatively impact animal's foraging opportunities, depleting energy reserves and compromising reproduction and survival. Finally, warmer temperatures disrupt hibernation cycles in the seed-dispersing marsupial. The combined result of these intersecting stressors depresses interaction rates and may trigger an extinction vortex if fail to adapt, with deep community-wide implications. Through negatively affecting generalist mutualists which provide resilience and stability to interaction networks, local-scale climate impacts may precipitate community-wide extinction cascades. We urge future studies to assess climate change effects on interaction networks rather than on singular species or pairwise partnerships.

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气候变化可以以神秘的方式破坏生态相互作用:利用生态通才来预测整个社区的影响
生态相互作用是生物多样性的支柱。与单个物种一样,相互作用受到生物多样性丧失驱动因素的威胁,其中气候变化在更广泛的范围内运作,并可能加剧土地利用变化、过度采伐和入侵物种的影响。随着温度的升高,我们预计一些物种可能会改变它们的分布,以适应更适宜的环境。然而,温暖和干燥的气候可能对植物和动物施加局部影响,在观察到明显的分布变化之前破坏它们的相互作用。根据我们目前对这个系统的了解,我们使用了来自南美洲温带森林的互惠三人组,从理论上说明了气候变化是如何破坏生态相互作用的。该研究系统由三个具有交叉作用的通才物种组成:一个基石槲寄生,一个传粉者蜂鸟,一个传播许多物种种子的果食性有袋动物。一方面,干旱造成水资源紧张,增加了槲寄生和寄主植物的死亡率,减少了花和果实的产量。这些资源短缺对动物的觅食机会产生了负面影响,耗尽了能量储备,损害了繁殖和生存。最后,温暖的温度扰乱了这种散播种子的有袋类动物的冬眠周期。这些交叉压力源的综合结果降低了相互作用率,如果不能适应,可能会引发灭绝漩涡,具有深远的社区影响。局地尺度的气候影响对为相互作用网络提供弹性和稳定性的通才互惠主义者产生负面影响,可能导致整个社区的物种灭绝级联。我们敦促未来的研究评估气候变化对相互作用网络的影响,而不是单一物种或成对伙伴关系。
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