利用晚更新世以来的假说和降水评估国内和非本地物种对性状-环境关系的影响

Rachel A. Short, Michael Sketel, Jeff M. Martin, Julia A. Schap, A Michelle Lawing
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摘要

生态系统的功能部分依赖于动物的功能特征和它们所生活的环境之间的一致关系。性状-环境关系的研究主要集中在本地物种群落,但国内和非本地物种也在现代生态系统的功能中发挥作用。通过比较现代本地、现代本地+本地、现代本地+非本地和晚更新世(0.126 ~ 0.0117 Ma)四种群落组成,我们利用生态计量学或功能性状-环境关系研究来评估本地和非本地物种对群落水平性状组成的影响及其与降水的关系。我们将大型和小型草食性哺乳动物整合到一个单一的牙齿缺损(即牙冠高度)和年降水量的生态计量模型中(n=8439, r=-0.7, R2=0.4, p<0.001)。我们假设:1)现代本土群落的生态计量模型将不同于晚更新世群落的生态计量模型;2)家养物种的纳入将使现代本土群落的生态计量关系与晚更新世的生态计量关系保持一致;3)非本土物种的纳入将维持现代本土群落的生态计量关系。我们发现,与晚更新世群落相比,现代本地物种群落具有较低的假说值和较高的降水估算值。家养物种将现代群落转向更高的假说值和更低的降水估计,就像晚更新世那样。今天的家养动物大多是高冠食草动物,它们是全新世之前消失的动物群的代表。非本地物种不会改变现代本地性状组成或相关的降水估计,说明非本地物种的成功是由于与新环境的性状一致。因此,保护和恢复工作应考虑整个群落的性状组成,因为它为分类组成的测量提供了独特的信息。
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Assessing Impact of Domestic and Non-Native Species on Trait-Environment Relationships Using Hypsodonty and Precipitation Since the Late Pleistocene
Ecosystem function relies in part on aligned relationships between functional traits of animals and the environments in which they live. Studies of trait-environment relationships have largely focused on communities of native species, but domestic and non-native species also play a role in the functioning of modern ecosystems. We use ecometrics, or study of functional trait-environment relationships, to evaluate the impact of domestic and non-native species on community-level trait composition and its relationship with precipitation by comparing four community compositions: modern native, modern native plus domestic, modern native plus non-native, and late Pleistocene (0.126–0.0117 Ma). We integrate large and small herbivorous mammals into a single ecometric model of hypsodonty (i.e., tooth crown height) and annual precipitation (n=8439, r=-0.7, R2=0.4, p<0.001). We hypothesize: 1) ecometric models of modern native communities will differ from those for late Pleistocene communities, 2) inclusion of domestic species will align ecometric relationships with those from the late Pleistocene, 3) inclusion of non-native species will maintain ecometric relationships of modern native communities. We found modern communities of native species have lower hypsodonty values and higher precipitation estimates than late Pleistocene communities. Domestic species shift modern communities toward higher hypsodonty values and lower precipitation estimates like those in the late Pleistocene. Today’s domestics are mostly high-crowned grazing species representative of the fauna lost prior to the Holocene. Non-native species do not shift modern native trait composition or the associated precipitation estimates, illustrating the success of non-native species due to trait alignment with their new environments. Thus, conservation and restoration efforts should consider trait composition of whole communities because it provides unique information to measures of taxonomic composition.
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