Climate change is associated with a higher extinction risk of a subshrub in anthropogenic landscapes

IF 5.6 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Eva Conquet, Arpat Ozgul, Susana Gómez‐González, Fernando Ojeda, Maria Paniw
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In most ecosystems, the increasingly strong effects of climate change on biodiversity co‐occur with other anthropogenic pressures, most importantly land‐use change. However, many long‐term demographic studies focus on populations monitored in protected areas, and our understanding of how climate change will affect population persistence under anthropogenic land use is still limited. To fill this knowledge gap, we assessed the consequences of co‐occurring land‐use and climate change on vital rates and population dynamics of a fire‐adapted Mediterranean carnivorous subshrub, the dewy pine (Drosophyllum lusitanicum). We used 7 years of individual data on 4753 plants monitored in three natural heathland sites that experience primarily fire as a disturbance, and five anthropogenic sites, where fires have been replaced by persistent disturbances from browsing or mechanical vegetation removal as a consequence of land‐use change. All sites are projected to experience increasingly hotter summers and drier falls and winters. We used generalised additive models to model non‐linear responses of survival, growth and reproduction to rainfall, temperature, size, density and time since fire in anthropogenic and natural dewy‐pine populations. We then projected population dynamics under climate‐change scenarios using an individual‐based model. Our findings reveal that vital rates respond differently to climate change in anthropogenic compared to natural habitats. While extinction risks did not change under climate change in natural habitats, future higher summer temperatures decreased survival and led to population declines and higher extinction probabilities in anthropogenic habitats. Synthesis. Our results highlight the possible dramatic effects of climate change on populations largely confined to chronically disturbed, anthropogenic habitats and provide a foundation for devising relevant management strategies aiming towards the protection of species in human‐disturbed habitats of the Mediterranean habitat. Overall, our findings emphasize the need for more long‐term studies in managed landscapes.
气候变化与人工景观中亚灌木的灭绝风险增加有关
在大多数生态系统中,气候变化对生物多样性的日益强烈的影响与其他人为压力(最重要的是土地利用变化)共同发生。然而,许多长期的人口统计研究集中在保护区监测的人口,我们对气候变化如何影响人为土地利用下的人口持续性的理解仍然有限。为了填补这一知识空白,我们评估了共同发生的土地利用和气候变化对适应火灾的地中海食肉亚灌木露珠松(Drosophyllum lusitanicum)的生命率和种群动态的影响。我们对4753种植物进行了7年的个体数据监测,这些植物分布在3个主要受火灾干扰的天然荒原和5个人为地点,在这些地点,火灾已被土地利用变化导致的浏览或机械植被移除的持续干扰所取代。预计所有地点的夏季将越来越热,秋季和冬季将越来越干燥。我们使用广义加性模型来模拟人工和自然露松种群的生存、生长和繁殖对降雨、温度、大小、密度和火灾后时间的非线性响应。然后,我们使用基于个体的模型预测了气候变化情景下的人口动态。我们的研究结果表明,与自然栖息地相比,人类栖息地的生命速率对气候变化的反应不同。自然生境的物种灭绝风险在气候变化的影响下没有发生变化,但未来较高的夏季气温降低了人类生境的物种存活率,导致种群数量下降和更高的灭绝概率。合成。我们的研究结果强调了气候变化对主要局限于长期受干扰的人类栖息地的种群可能产生的巨大影响,并为制定相关管理策略提供了基础,旨在保护地中海生境中受人类干扰栖息地的物种。总的来说,我们的研究结果强调了对管理景观进行更长期研究的必要性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Ecology
Journal of Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
5.50%
发文量
207
审稿时长
3.0 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Ecology publishes original research papers on all aspects of the ecology of plants (including algae), in both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. We do not publish papers concerned solely with cultivated plants and agricultural ecosystems. Studies of plant communities, populations or individual species are accepted, as well as studies of the interactions between plants and animals, fungi or bacteria, providing they focus on the ecology of the plants. We aim to bring important work using any ecological approach (including molecular techniques) to a wide international audience and therefore only publish papers with strong and ecological messages that advance our understanding of ecological principles.
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