从上一次冰川盛期到2070年的新西兰蕨类植物分布:迁徙和群落更替的动态故事

Pub Date : 2022-11-07 DOI:10.1640/0002-8444-112.4.354
J. Watts, J. E. Watkins
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要预计未来几十年将带来地方、区域和全球气候模式的广泛变化。目前,人们对蕨类植物将如何应对这些变化的了解有限,很少有研究试图模拟蕨类植物分布对气候变化的变化。在本文中,我们以新西兰为研究系统,提出了一系列这样的模型。蕨类植物在新西兰特别丰富,在早期演替、冠层生物学和林下动态中发挥着重要的生态作用。在这里,我们描述了从上一次冰川盛期到现在蕨类植物的分布是如何变化的,并预测了它们将如何随着人为气候变化而变化——假设不采取措施减少碳排放。为此,我们使用MaxEnt物种分布模型和gbif.org和worldclim.org的公开数据来预测107种新西兰蕨类植物的过去、现在和未来分布。目前的研究表明,新西兰的蕨类植物已经并将继续扩大其范围,向南和向上迁移。尽管预测气候变化会导致范围普遍扩大,但我们的模型预测,许多物种目前适宜的栖息地中,大多数(52%)在50年后可能在气候上不适宜,包括生态上重要的类群:树蕨。此外,蕨类植物群落的组成预计将发生剧烈变化,这可能对新西兰的整体生态系统功能不利。
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New Zealand Fern Distributions from the Last Glacial Maximum to 2070: A Dynamic Tale of Migration and Community Turnover
Abstract. The coming decades are predicated to bring widespread shifts in local, regional, and global climatic patterns. Currently there is limited understanding of how ferns will respond to these changes and few studies have attempted to model shifts in fern distribution in response to climate change. In this paper, we present a series of these models using the country of New Zealand as our study system. Ferns are notably abundant in New Zealand and play important ecological roles in early succession, canopy biology, and understory dynamics. Here we describe how fern distributions have changed since the Last Glacial Maximum to the present and predict how they will change with anthropogenic climate change – assuming no measures are taken to reduce carbon emissions. To do this, we used MaxEnt species distribution modelling with publicly available data from gbif.org and worldclim.org to predict the past, present, and future distributions of 107 New Zealand fern species. The present study demonstrates that ferns in New Zealand have and will continue to expand their ranges and migrate southward and upslope. Despite the predicted general increased range size as a result of climate change, our models predict that the majority (52%) of many species' current suitable habitats may be climatically unsuitable in 50 years, including the ecologically important group: tree ferns. Additionally, fern communities are predicted to undergo drastic shifts in composition, which may be detrimental to overall ecosystem functioning in New Zealand.
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