Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, 4202 East Fowler Avenue, SCA 110, Tampa, FL 33620, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2013 Aug;27(4):741-51. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12086. Epub 2013 Jun 14.
Climate change is believed to be causing declines of ectothermic vertebrates, but there is little evidence that climatic conditions associated with declines have exceeded critical (i.e., acutely lethal) maxima or minima, and most relevant studies are correlative, anecdotal, or short-term (hours). We conducted an 11-week factorial experiment to examine the effects of temperature (22 °C or 27 °C), moisture (wet or dry), and atrazine (an herbicide; 0, 4, 40, 400 μg/L exposure as embryos and larvae) on the survival, growth, behavior, and foraging rates of postmetamorphic streamside salamanders (Ambystoma barbouri), a species of conservation concern. The tested climatic conditions were between the critical maxima and minima of streamside salamanders; thus, this experiment quantified the long-term effects of climate change within the noncritical range of this species. Despite a suite of behavioral adaptations to warm and dry conditions (e.g., burrowing, refuge use, huddling with conspecifics, and a reduction in activity), streamside salamanders exhibited significant loss of mass and significant mortality in all but the cool and moist conditions, which were closest to the climatic conditions in which they are most active in nature. A temperature of 27 °C represented a greater mortality risk than dry conditions; death occurred rapidly at this temperature and more gradually under cool and dry conditions. Foraging decreased under dry conditions, which suggests there were opportunity costs to water conservation. Exposure to the herbicide atrazine additively decreased water-conserving behaviors, foraging efficiency, mass, and time to death. Hence, the hypothesis that moderate climate change can cause population declines is even more plausible under scenarios with multiple stressors. These results suggest that climate change within the noncritical range of species and pollution may reduce individual performance by altering metabolic demands, hydration, and foraging effort and may facilitate population declines of amphibians and perhaps other ectothermic vertebrates.
人们认为气候变化正在导致变温脊椎动物数量减少,但几乎没有证据表明与减少相关的气候条件已经超过了临界(即急性致命)最大值或最小值,而且大多数相关研究都是相关的、轶事性的或短期的(数小时)。我们进行了一项为期 11 周的因子实验,以研究温度(22°C 或 27°C)、湿度(湿或干)和莠去津(一种除草剂;胚胎和幼虫暴露 0、4、40、400μg/L)对变态后溪边蝾螈(Ambystoma barbouri)的存活、生长、行为和觅食率的影响,溪边蝾螈是一种受到保护关注的物种。测试的气候条件处于溪边蝾螈的临界最大值和最小值之间;因此,这项实验量化了该物种非临界范围内气候变化的长期影响。尽管有一系列适应温暖和干燥条件的行为(例如,打洞、使用避难所、与同种动物挤在一起以及减少活动),但在除凉爽和潮湿条件之外的所有条件下,溪边蝾螈都表现出显著的体重减轻和显著的死亡率,而凉爽和潮湿条件最接近其自然状态下最活跃的气候条件。27°C 的温度代表着更高的死亡率风险;在这个温度下,死亡迅速发生,而在凉爽和干燥的条件下则逐渐发生。在干燥条件下,觅食减少,这表明节约用水存在机会成本。暴露于除草剂莠去津会使节水行为、觅食效率、体重和死亡时间减少。因此,即使在有多种胁迫源的情况下,温和的气候变化也可能导致种群减少的假设更为合理。这些结果表明,在物种非临界范围内的气候变化和污染可能会通过改变代谢需求、水合作用和觅食努力来降低个体表现,并可能促进两栖动物和其他可能的变温脊椎动物的种群减少。