Harper Matthew P, Peckarsky Barbara L
Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2006 Apr;16(2):612-21. doi: 10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[0612:ecoami]2.0.co;2.
To understand the consequences of human accelerated environmental change, it is important to document the effects on natural populations of an increasing frequency of extreme climatic events. In stream ecosystems, recent climate change has resulted in extreme variation in both thermal and hydrological regimes. From 2001 to 2004, a severe drought in western United States corresponded with earlier emergence of the adult stage of the high-altitude stream mayfly, Baetis bicaudatus. Using a long-term database from a western Colorado stream, the peak emergence date of this mayfly population was predicted by both the magnitude and date of peak stream flow, and by the mean daily water temperature, suggesting that Baetis may respond to declining stream flow or increasing water temperature as proximate cues for early metamorphosis. However, in a one-year survey of multiple streams from the same drainage basin, only water temperature predicted spatial variation in the onset of emergence of this mayfly. To decouple the effects of temperature and flow, we separately manipulated these factors in flow-through microcosms and measured the timing of B. bicaudatus metamorphosis to the adult stage. Mayflies emerged sooner in a warmed-water treatment than an ambient-water treatment; but reducing flow did not accelerate the onset of mayfly emergence. Nonetheless, using warming temperatures to cue metamorphosis enables mayflies to time their emergence during the descending limb of the hydrograph when oviposition sites (protruding rocks) are becoming available. We speculate that large-scale climate changes involving warming and stream drying could cause significant shifts in the timing of mayfly metamorphosis, thereby having negative effects on populations that play an important role in stream ecosystems.
为了解人类加速的环境变化所带来的后果,记录极端气候事件频率增加对自然种群的影响非常重要。在溪流生态系统中,近期的气候变化导致了热状况和水文状况的极端变化。2001年至2004年,美国西部的严重干旱与高海拔溪流蜉蝣Baetis bicaudatus成虫阶段的提前出现相对应。利用科罗拉多州西部一条溪流的长期数据库,该蜉蝣种群的羽化高峰期可通过溪流流量峰值的大小和日期以及日均水温来预测,这表明Baetis可能将溪流流量下降或水温升高作为早期变态的直接线索做出反应。然而,在对同一流域多条溪流进行的为期一年的调查中,只有水温能预测这种蜉蝣羽化开始的空间变化。为了区分温度和流量的影响,我们在流水微宇宙中分别操纵这些因素,并测量Baetis bicaudatus变态为成虫阶段的时间。在温水处理中,蜉蝣羽化比在常温水处理中更早;但减少流量并没有加速蜉蝣羽化的开始。尽管如此,利用升温来提示变态使蜉蝣能够在水文曲线下降阶段产卵地点(突出的岩石)可用时安排它们的羽化时间。我们推测,涉及变暖和溪流干涸的大规模气候变化可能会导致蜉蝣变态时间的显著变化,从而对在溪流生态系统中起重要作用的种群产生负面影响。