Percy FitzPatrick Institute, DST/NRF Centre of Excellence, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South Africa.
Climate Service, South African Weather Service, Pretoria, South Africa.
PLoS One. 2013 Dec 4;8(12):e82492. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0082492. eCollection 2013.
Increases in the frequency, duration and intensity of heat waves are frequently evoked in climate change predictions. However, there is no universal definition of a heat wave. Recent, intense hot weather events have caused mass mortalities of birds, bats and even humans, making the definition and prediction of heat wave events that have the potential to impact populations of different species an urgent priority. One possible technique for defining biologically meaningful heat waves is to use threshold temperatures (T(thresh)) above which known fitness costs are incurred by species of interest. We set out to test the utility of this technique using T(thresh) values that, when exceeded, affect aspects of the fitness of two focal southern African bird species: the southern pied babbler Turdiodes bicolor (T(thresh) = 35.5 °C) and the common fiscal Lanius collaris (T(thresh) = 33 °C). We used these T(thresh) values to analyse trends in the frequency, duration and intensity of heat waves of magnitude relevant to the focal species, as well as the annual number of hot days (maximum air temperature > T(thresh)), in north-western South Africa between 1961 and 2010. Using this technique, we were able to show that, while all heat wave indices increased during the study period, most rapid increases for both species were in the annual number of hot days and in the maximum intensity (and therefore intensity variance) of biologically meaningful heat waves. Importantly, we also showed that warming trends were not uniform across the study area and that geographical patterns in warming allowed both areas of high risk and potential climate refugia to be identified. We discuss the implications of the trends we found for our focal species, and the utility of the T(thresh) technique as a conservation tool.
气候变化预测中经常会提到热浪的频率、持续时间和强度的增加。然而,目前还没有热浪的通用定义。最近,强烈的炎热天气事件导致鸟类、蝙蝠甚至人类大量死亡,这使得定义和预测可能对不同物种种群产生影响的热浪事件成为当务之急。一种可能的定义具有生物学意义的热浪的技术是使用物种已知的适应成本发生的阈值温度(T(thresh))。我们着手使用 T(thresh) 值来测试该技术的效用,当超过 T(thresh) 值时,会影响到我们关注的两种南非南部鸟类物种的适应性方面:南部彩色巴布鸟(T(thresh) = 35.5°C)和普通财政鸟(Lanius collaris)(T(thresh) = 33°C)。我们使用这些 T(thresh) 值来分析在 1961 年至 2010 年间,对焦点物种相关的幅度的热浪的频率、持续时间和强度的趋势,以及每年炎热天数(最高空气温度>T(thresh))的趋势。使用该技术,我们能够表明,虽然在研究期间所有的热浪指数都在增加,但对这两个物种来说,最快速的增加是每年炎热天数的增加,以及具有生物学意义的热浪的最大强度(因此强度方差)的增加。重要的是,我们还表明,变暖趋势在研究区域内并不均匀,并且变暖的地理模式可以确定高风险和潜在气候避难所的区域。我们讨论了我们发现的这些趋势对我们关注的物种的影响,以及 T(thresh) 技术作为保护工具的效用。