气候变暖增加了热带常见的沙蛙(Eleutherodactylus coqui)的活动

T.J. Hawley Matlaga , P.A. Burrowes , R. Hernández-Pacheco , J. Pena , C. Sutherland , T.E. Wood
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引用次数: 0

摘要

预计热带生态系统将经历气候变暖,预计未来几年干旱和极端高温事件将增加。对这些变化将如何影响两栖类等陆生脊椎动物的了解是有限的。在波多黎各东北部的Luquillo实验森林中进行的热带对气候变化的反应实验使我们能够在一个重复的地块设计中研究热带森林对变暖的反应。从2018年9月到2019年8月,我们采用标记再捕获抽样的方法,研究了地表温度比环境温度高4℃对普通coqui蛙(Eleutherodactylus coqui)空间种群生态的影响。我们比较了基线检测、空间使用和对照组和暖样地青蛙密度的估计。Coqui的空间利用和人口密度在对照组和暖地之间没有差异。然而,coqui检测概率在温暖的地块更高,表明相对于对照(未温暖的)地块的个体,活动水平增加。随着降水量的增加,各样地的蛙类检出率均有所增加。我们的研究结果表明,至少在短期内,像E. coqui这样的生态多面手蛙的密度不会随着地表温度的升高而改变。然而,对气候变暖的短期反应,如行为的变化,可能导致长期人口动态的变化。我们的研究强调,为了了解气候变暖对热带脊椎动物的影响,需要考虑多种反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Warming increases activity in the common tropical frog Eleutherodactylus coqui

Tropical ecosystems are expected to experience climate warming, with predicted increases in drying and heat extremes in the coming years. Understanding how these changes will affect terrestrial vertebrates such as amphibians is limited. The Tropical Responses to Altered Climate Experiment in the Luquillo Experimental Forest in northeastern Puerto Rico allows us to study how the tropical forest responds to warming within a replicated plot design. From September 2018 to August 2019, we used mark-recapture sampling to investigate how the spatial population ecology of the common coqui frog (Eleutherodactylus coqui) is impacted by experimentally increasing surface temperatures by 4 °C above ambient. We compared estimates of baseline detection, space use, and the density of frogs in control and warmed plots. Coqui space use and population density did not differ between control and warmed plots. However, coqui detection probabilities were higher in warmed plots, suggesting an increased level of activity relative to individuals in the control (unwarmed) plots. Frog detection increased in all plots with increased precipitation. Our results suggest that, at least in the short-term, the density of an ecological generalist frog like E. coqui does not change as a response to increased surface temperatures. However, short-term responses to warming such as changes in behavior may lead to changes in population dynamics in the long-term. Our research highlights the need to consider mutiple repsonses in order to understand the effects of climate warming on tropical vertebrates.

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