巴西塞拉多的气候变化:对陆地生物多样性迫在眉睫的威胁

Gabriel S. Hofmann, Eliseu J. Weber, Vinicius Augusto Galvão Bastazini, Davi R. Rossatto, Augusto C. Franco, Camille E. Granada, Lucas A. Kaminski, Flávio K. Ubaid, Victor Leandro‐Silva, Márcio Borges‐Martins, Rafael C. Silva, Manoel F. Cardoso, Luiz F. B. Oliveira, Francisco E. Aquino, Maria J. R. Pereira
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的5000年里,巴西塞拉多地区可预测的气候季节性在塑造这个全球生物多样性热点地区物种的生活史策略和生态群落结构方面发挥了至关重要的作用。然而,这个生物群落正变得越来越热,越来越干燥,旱季明显延长和加剧。降水减少是由三个关键因素造成的:南大西洋副热带反气旋的扩张、北热带大西洋水域的变暖以及旱季由于广泛的土地转换而导致的蒸散减少。蒸散发下降对区域增温和水汽压亏缺也起着关键作用。气候变化已经影响了塞拉多植物的生理、物候和繁殖,同时也推动了群落水平的变化,如树木侵蚀和植物-食草动物相互作用的结果。旱季延长可能会减少生物量并改变微生物群落的动态,其负面影响也延伸到无脊椎动物和其他类群。明显的变暖减少了露珠的数量和持续时间,而露珠是昆虫传粉者和其他在干旱时期缺乏灵活性的动物的重要水源。在脊椎动物方面,最可能的影响是分布受限的特有种或特有种的丧失,以及通才物种的扩张,降低了整个地区的β -和γ -多样性水平,使群落更加贫穷和同质化。总之,气候变化正在积极地重塑塞拉多群落,物种的生存将在很大程度上取决于它们的表型可塑性、进化反应和扩散能力。本文分类如下:评估气候变化影响>;观测到的气候变化影响>;观测到的生态变化>;跨学科视角>;区域综述
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Climate Change in the Brazilian Cerrado: A Looming Threat to Terrestrial Biodiversity
Over the past 5000 years, the predictable climate seasonality of the Brazilian Cerrado has played a crucial role in shaping the life history strategies of species and the structure of ecological communities of this global biodiversity hotspot. However, this biome is becoming hotter and drier, with a notable lengthening and intensification of the dry season. Declining rainfall results from three key factors: the expansion of the South Atlantic Subtropical Anticyclone, warming of northern tropical Atlantic waters, and reduced evapotranspiration during the dry season due to widespread land conversion. The evapotranspiration drop also plays a pivotal role in regional warming and higher vapor pressure deficit. Climatic change already affects the physiology, phenology, and reproduction of the Cerrado plants, while also driving community‐level alterations, such as woody encroachment and ant–plant–herbivore interaction outcomes. Dry season lengthening is likely to reduce the biomass and alter the dynamics of microbial communities, with negative effects also extending to invertebrates and other groups. The pronounced warming reduces the amount and duration of dewfall, an important water source for insect pollinators and other animals with low vagility during periods of drought. Concerning vertebrates, the most suggested impact is the loss of specialist or endemic species, with restricted distributions, and the expansion of generalist species, lowering the levels of β‐ and γ‐diversity across the region and making communities poorer and more homogenized. In summary, climate change is actively reshaping Cerrado communities, and species' survival will largely depend on their phenotypic plasticity, evolutionary response, and dispersal capabilities.This article is categorized under: Assessing Impacts of Climate Change > Observed Impacts of Climate Change Climate, Ecology, and Conservation > Observed Ecological Changes Trans‐disciplinary Perspectives > Regional Reviews
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