Department of Biology, SUNY Buffalo State, 1300 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, NY, 14222, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2014 Feb;20(2):466-74. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12407. Epub 2013 Oct 28.
Successful species interactions require that both partners share a similar cue. For many species, spring warming acts as a shared signal to synchronize mutualist behaviors. Spring flowering plants and the ants that disperse their seeds respond to warming temperatures so that ants forage when plants drop seeds. However, where warm-adapted ants replace cold-adapted ants, changes in this timing might leave early seeds stranded without a disperser. We investigate plant seed dispersal south and north of a distinct boundary between warm- and cold-adapted ants to determine if changes in the ant species influence local plant dispersal. The warm-adapted ants forage much later than the cold-adapted ants, and so we first assess natural populations of early and late blooming plants. We then transplant these plants south and north of the ant boundary to test whether distinct ant climate requirements disrupt the ant-plant mutualism. Whereas the early blooming plant's inability to synchronize with the warm-adapted ant leaves its populations clumped and patchy and its seedlings clustered around the parents in natural populations, when transplanted into the range of the cold-adapted ant, effective seed dispersal recovers. In contrast, the mutualism persists for the later blooming plant regardless of location because it sets seed later in spring when both warm- and cold-adapted ant species forage, resulting in effective seed dispersal. These results indicate that the climate response of species interactions, not just the species themselves, is integral in understanding ecological responses to a changing climate. Data linking phenological synchrony and dispersal are rare, and these results suggest a viable mechanism by which a species' range is limited more by biotic than abiotic interactions - despite the general assumption that biotic influences are buried within larger climate drivers. These results show that biotic partner can be as fundamental a niche requirement as abiotic resources.
成功的物种相互作用要求双方共享相似的线索。对于许多物种来说,春季变暖是一种共同的信号,可以使共生行为同步。春季开花植物和传播它们种子的蚂蚁会对变暖的温度做出反应,这样当植物掉落种子时,蚂蚁就会觅食。然而,在温暖适应的蚂蚁取代寒冷适应的蚂蚁的地方,这种时间的变化可能会导致早期的种子在没有传播者的情况下搁浅。我们调查了温暖适应的蚂蚁和寒冷适应的蚂蚁之间明显分界线以南和以北的植物种子传播,以确定蚂蚁物种的变化是否会影响当地植物的传播。温暖适应的蚂蚁觅食的时间比寒冷适应的蚂蚁晚得多,因此我们首先评估了早花和晚花植物的自然种群。然后,我们将这些植物移植到蚂蚁分界线的南北两侧,以测试不同的蚂蚁气候要求是否会破坏蚂蚁-植物共生关系。早开花植物无法与温暖适应的蚂蚁同步,导致其种群聚集且分布不均匀,幼苗簇生在自然种群中父母周围,而当移植到寒冷适应的蚂蚁分布范围内时,有效的种子传播就会恢复。相比之下,无论位置如何,晚开花植物的共生关系都能持续,因为它在春季后期设置种子,此时温暖和寒冷适应的蚂蚁物种都在觅食,从而实现有效的种子传播。这些结果表明,物种相互作用的气候反应,而不仅仅是物种本身,是理解生态系统对气候变化反应的一个组成部分。将物候同步性和传播联系起来的数据很少,这些结果表明了一种可行的机制,即一个物种的范围更多地受到生物因素的限制,而不是非生物因素的限制——尽管人们普遍认为生物因素的影响隐藏在更大的气候驱动因素中。这些结果表明,生物伙伴可以像生物资源一样,成为一个基本的生态位需求。