Variable choice affects estimations of vulnerability to climate change

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q1 ORNITHOLOGY
Ibis Pub Date : 2023-10-03 DOI:10.1111/ibi.13281
Krista N. Oswald, Shannon R. Conradie
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

For practical reasons, assessments of species' vulnerability to rising temperatures are often limited to measuring responses to a single ecological response variable, but this could result in an underestimation of vulnerability. Using the Cape Rockjumper Chaetops frenatus (‘Rockjumper’) we examined the thermal risk to nestling Rockjumpers for sublethal (i.e. reduced nestling mass gain) and lethal (i.e. increased nest predation) consequences of sustained hot weather under both current and predicted future climatic conditions (RCP 8.5). We used a direct approach to examine these risks, first as independent ecological responses and then as combined risk driven by both response variables (mass gain and predation risk). This study revealed that the inclusion of multiple climate-related responses affected the predicted vulnerability to climate change. Further, our analyses showed that increased vulnerability to climate change will vary within the Rockjumper's habitat. Our results demonstrate that the variability in predicted thermal risk depends on which response variable was used, with implications for how and where conservation practitioners direct their already limited resources.

Abstract Image

变量选择影响对气候变化脆弱性的估计
由于实际原因,对物种易受气温上升影响的评估通常仅限于测量对单一生态响应变量的响应,但这可能导致低估物种的易受影响程度。我们利用开普跳岩鸟 Chaetops frenatus("跳岩鸟")研究了在当前和预测的未来气候条件(RCP 8.5)下,持续高温天气对跳岩鸟雏鸟造成亚致死(即雏鸟增重减少)和致死(即巢穴捕食增加)后果的热风险。我们采用直接的方法来研究这些风险,首先研究独立的生态响应,然后研究由两个响应变量(增重和捕食风险)驱动的综合风险。这项研究表明,包含多种气候相关响应会影响预测的气候变化脆弱性。此外,我们的分析表明,在跳岩鸻的栖息地内,对气候变化脆弱性的增加会有所不同。我们的研究结果表明,预测热风险的变化取决于所使用的响应变量,这对保护工作者如何以及在何处使用他们本已有限的资源产生了影响。
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
Ibis
Ibis 生物-鸟类学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
9.50%
发文量
118
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: IBIS publishes original papers, reviews, short communications and forum articles reflecting the forefront of international research activity in ornithological science, with special emphasis on the behaviour, ecology, evolution and conservation of birds. IBIS aims to publish as rapidly as is consistent with the requirements of peer-review and normal publishing constraints.
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