The Environment Institute, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia.
Glob Chang Biol. 2013 Oct;19(10):3224-37. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12289.
Evidence is accumulating that species' responses to climate changes are best predicted by modelling the interaction of physiological limits, biotic processes and the effects of dispersal-limitation. Using commercially harvested blacklip (Haliotis rubra) and greenlip abalone (Haliotis laevigata) as case studies, we determine the relative importance of accounting for interactions among physiology, metapopulation dynamics and exploitation in predictions of range (geographical occupancy) and abundance (spatially explicit density) under various climate change scenarios. Traditional correlative ecological niche models (ENM) predict that climate change will benefit the commercial exploitation of abalone by promoting increased abundances without any reduction in range size. However, models that account simultaneously for demographic processes and physiological responses to climate-related factors result in future (and present) estimates of area of occupancy (AOO) and abundance that differ from those generated by ENMs alone. Range expansion and population growth are unlikely for blacklip abalone because of important interactions between climate-dependent mortality and metapopulation processes; in contrast, greenlip abalone should increase in abundance despite a contraction in AOO. The strongly non-linear relationship between abalone population size and AOO has important ramifications for the use of ENM predictions that rely on metrics describing change in habitat area as proxies for extinction risk. These results show that predicting species' responses to climate change often require physiological information to understand climatic range determinants, and a metapopulation model that can make full use of this data to more realistically account for processes such as local extirpation, demographic rescue, source-sink dynamics and dispersal-limitation.
越来越多的证据表明,通过模拟生理极限、生物过程和扩散限制的相互作用来预测物种对气候变化的反应最为准确。本研究以商业捕捞的黑唇鲍(Haliotis rubra)和绿唇鲍(Haliotis laevigata)为案例研究,确定了在各种气候变化情景下,考虑生理、复合种群动态和开发利用相互作用对范围(地理占有率)和丰度(空间明确密度)预测的相对重要性。传统的相关生态位模型(ENM)预测,气候变化将通过促进数量增加而不会减少范围大小来有利于鲍鱼的商业开发利用。然而,同时考虑人口过程和生理对与气候相关因素的反应的模型导致了与仅通过 ENM 生成的未来(和当前)占有率(AOO)和丰度估计不同。由于气候相关死亡率和复合种群过程之间的重要相互作用,黑唇鲍的范围扩张和种群增长不太可能;相比之下,绿唇鲍的数量应该会增加,尽管 AOO 会收缩。鲍种群大小与 AOO 之间的强烈非线性关系对依赖于描述栖息地面积变化作为灭绝风险代理的 ENM 预测的使用具有重要影响。这些结果表明,预测物种对气候变化的反应通常需要生理信息来了解气候范围决定因素,以及能够充分利用这些数据的复合种群模型,以更现实地考虑局部灭绝、人口拯救、源汇动态和扩散限制等过程。