School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.
Am Nat. 2011 Jan;177(1):119-29. doi: 10.1086/657624. Epub 2010 Nov 22.
Recent climate change has caused the distributions of many species to shift poleward, yet few empirical studies have addressed which species will be vulnerable to longer-term climate changes. To investigate past consequences of climate change, we calculated the population extinction rates of 35 reptile species from 87 Greek land-bridge islands in the Mediterranean that occurred over the past 16,000 years. Population extinction rates were higher for those species that today have more northern distributions. We further found that northern species requiring cool, mesic habitats had less available suitable habitat among islands, implicating loss of suitable habitat in their elevated extinction rates. These extinctions occurred in the context of increasing habitat fragmentation, with islands shrinking and separating as sea levels rose. Thus, the circumstances faced by reptiles on the islands are similar to challenges for numerous species today that must cope with a changing climate while living in an increasingly human-fragmented landscape. Our island-biogeographical approach to investigating historical population extinctions gives insight into the long-term patterns of species responses to climate change.
最近的气候变化导致许多物种的分布向两极转移,但很少有实证研究探讨哪些物种将容易受到长期气候变化的影响。为了研究过去气候变化的后果,我们计算了过去 16000 年来地中海 87 个希腊陆桥岛屿上 35 种爬行动物的种群灭绝率。今天分布在更北部的物种,其种群灭绝率更高。我们进一步发现,需要凉爽、湿润生境的北部物种在岛屿之间的适宜栖息地较少,这意味着它们较高的灭绝率与适宜栖息地的丧失有关。这些灭绝发生在栖息地破碎化增加的背景下,随着海平面上升,岛屿缩小和分离。因此,岛屿上爬行动物面临的情况与当今许多物种所面临的挑战相似,它们必须在不断变化的气候中生存,同时生活在日益受到人类破坏的景观中。我们通过岛屿生物地理学方法研究历史上的种群灭绝,深入了解了物种对气候变化的长期反应模式。