Área de Biodiversidad y Conservación, Escuela Superior de Ciencias Experimentales y Tecnología, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Tulipán s/n, Móstoles, Madrid E-28933, Spain Departamento de Zoología y Antropología Física, Universidad Complutense, Madrid E-28040, Spain.
Ecol Lett. 2005 Nov;8(11):1138-46. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2005.00824.x.
The first expected symptoms of a climate change-generated biodiversity crisis are range contractions and extinctions at lower elevational and latitudinal limits to species distributions. However, whilst range expansions at high elevations and latitudes have been widely documented, there has been surprisingly little evidence for contractions at warm margins. We show that lower elevational limits for 16 butterfly species in central Spain have risen on average by 212 m (± SE 60) in 30 years, accompanying a 1.3 °C rise (equivalent to c. 225 m) in mean annual temperature. These elevational shifts signify an average reduction in habitable area by one-third, with losses of 50-80% projected for the coming century, given maintenance of the species thermal associations. The results suggest that many species have already suffered climate-mediated habitat losses that may threaten their long-term chances of survival.
气候变化引发的生物多样性危机的首批预期症状是物种分布的海拔和纬度下限的范围收缩和灭绝。然而,尽管已经广泛记录了高海拔和高纬度地区的范围扩大,但在温暖地区的范围缩小却鲜有证据。我们表明,西班牙中部 16 种蝴蝶的低海拔极限在 30 年内平均上升了 212 米(±SE60),而平均年气温上升了 1.3°C(相当于约 225 米)。这些海拔的变化意味着适宜栖息地的面积平均减少了三分之一,如果物种的热关联性得以维持,预计下个世纪的损失将达到 50-80%。研究结果表明,许多物种已经遭受了可能威胁其长期生存机会的气候变化导致的栖息地丧失。