瑞士山区公路沿线植物群落对气候变暖反应的早期迹象

bioRxiv Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.1101/2024.07.12.603213
Evelin Iseli, Nathan Diaz Zeugin, Camille Brioschi, Jake M. Alexander, J. Lenoir
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引用次数: 0

摘要

全球变暖促使物种的分布范围向高纬度和高海拔地区转移,导致植物群落重新组合,并可能伴随群落嗜热化(即嗜热物种的数量或覆盖率增加,有时以牺牲中性或适应寒冷的物种为代价)。鉴于通常观察到的范围变化的幅度和方向存在很大差异,量化群落嗜热化可能会提供一种灵敏的方法来检测短时间内和有限空间范围内的范围变化。从整体上评估植物群落组成的变化可能会在考虑出现率和丰度变化的同时,整合共生物种之间范围转移的早期迹象。在这里,我们结合了对瑞士三条山路沿线的(i)物种水平范围转移、(ii)物种丰富度变化和(iii)群落推断温度变化的评估,来探究植物群落是否在 10 年内对气候变暖做出了反应,以及群落嗜热是否是早期检测这些变化的适当指标。仅根据存在-消失数据,我们发现在 10 年的研究期间,群落嗜热化信号为 +0.13°C。尽管在所研究的海拔梯度的下半部分,物种的分布范围上限出现了明显的上移,高海拔地区的物种丰富度也有所下降,但如果根据物种的覆盖度对群落推断的温度进行加权计算,则无法检测到明显的嗜热现象。在研究期间增加或减少的物种的低覆盖值及其与常住物种相似的物种特异性温度解释了在覆盖加权或非加权模型中检测到的嗜热现象之间的差异。综述。我们的研究表明,瑞士阿尔卑斯山西部路旁的植物物种正在向高海拔地区迁移,这将在 10 年内转化为可检测到的植物群落变暖信号。然而,物种层面的范围转移和群落层面的变暖效应大多基于增/减物种的低覆盖值,因此在纳入覆盖变化时无法检测到群落热化信号。因此,我们建议使用非加权方法来早期检测群落层面对气候变化的反应,最好同时评估物种层面的范围变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Early signs of plant community responses to climate warming along mountain roads in Switzerland
Global warming is pushing species to shift their ranges towards higher latitudes and elevations, causing a reassembly of plant communities potentially accompanied by community thermophilization (i.e., an increasing number or cover of thermophilic species, sometimes at the expense of mesic or cold-adapted species). Given the large variation typically observed in the magnitude and direction of range shifts, quantifying community thermophilization might provide a sensitive method to detect range shifts within short time periods and across limited spatial extents. Assessing changes in plant community composition as a whole might integrate early signs of range shifts across co-occurring species while accounting for changes in both occurrence and abundance. Here, we combine an assessment of (i) species-level range shifts, (ii) changes in species richness and (iii) changes in community-inferred temperatures along three mountain roads in Switzerland to ask whether plant communities have responded to warming climate over a 10 year period, and whether community thermophilization is an appropriate metric for early detection of these changes. We found a community thermophilization signal of +0.13°C over the 10-year study period based on presence-absence data only. Despite significant upward shifts of species’ upper range limits in the lower part of the studied elevational gradient and a decrease in species richness at high elevations, significant thermophilization was not detectable if community- inferred temperatures were weighted by species’ covers. Low cover values of species that were gained or lost over the study period and their similar species-specific temperatures to resident species explained the discrepancy between the thermophilization detected in either cover-weighted or unweighted models. Synthesis. Our work shows that plant species are shifting to higher elevations along roadsides in the western Swiss Alps and that this translates into a detectable warming signal of plant communities within 10 years. However, the species-level range shifts and the community-level warming effect are mostly based on low cover values of gained/lost species, preventing the detection of community thermophilization signals when incorporating cover changes. We therefore recommend using unweighted approaches for early detection of community-level responses to changing climate, ideally set into context by also assessing species-level range shifts.
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