Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and CU Museum of Natural History, University of Colorado, 265 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2014 Jun;20(6):1760-9. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12499. Epub 2014 Jan 22.
Model predictions of extinction risks from anthropogenic climate change are dire, but still overly simplistic. To reliably predict at-risk species we need to know which species are currently responding, which are not, and what traits are mediating the responses. For mammals, we have yet to identify overarching physiological, behavioral, or biogeographic traits determining species' responses to climate change, but they must exist. To date, 73 mammal species in North America and eight additional species worldwide have been assessed for responses to climate change, including local extirpations, range contractions and shifts, decreased abundance, phenological shifts, morphological or genetic changes. Only 52% of those species have responded as expected, 7% responded opposite to expectations, and the remaining 41% have not responded. Which mammals are and are not responding to climate change is mediated predominantly by body size and activity times (phylogenetic multivariate logistic regressions, P < 0.0001). Large mammals respond more, for example, an elk is 27 times more likely to respond to climate change than a shrew. Obligate diurnal and nocturnal mammals are more than twice as likely to respond as mammals with flexible activity times (P < 0.0001). Among the other traits examined, species with higher latitudinal and elevational ranges were more likely to respond to climate change in some analyses, whereas hibernation, heterothermy, burrowing, nesting, and study location did not influence responses. These results indicate that some mammal species can behaviorally escape climate change whereas others cannot, analogous to paleontology's climate sheltering hypothesis. Including body size and activity flexibility traits into future extinction risk forecasts should substantially improve their predictive utility for conservation and management.
人为气候变化导致物种灭绝的预测模型非常可怕,但仍然过于简单。为了可靠地预测濒危物种,我们需要知道哪些物种正在受到影响,哪些没有受到影响,以及哪些特征在调节这些反应。对于哺乳动物,我们还没有确定决定物种对气候变化反应的总体生理、行为或生物地理特征,但它们肯定存在。迄今为止,已经评估了北美 73 种哺乳动物和全球其他 8 种物种对气候变化的反应,包括局部灭绝、范围收缩和转移、数量减少、物候变化、形态或遗传变化。只有 52%的物种如预期那样做出了反应,7%的物种反应与预期相反,其余 41%的物种没有反应。哪些哺乳动物对气候变化有反应,哪些没有反应,主要由体型和活动时间(系统发育多元逻辑回归,P < 0.0001)来介导。例如,麋鹿对气候变化的反应可能性是鼩鼱的 27 倍,大型哺乳动物的反应更为频繁。昼行性和夜行性哺乳动物比活动时间灵活的哺乳动物更有可能做出反应(P < 0.0001)。在其他研究的特征中,一些分析表明,具有较高纬度和海拔范围的物种更有可能对气候变化做出反应,而冬眠、异温性、穴居、筑巢和研究地点对反应没有影响。这些结果表明,一些哺乳动物物种可以通过行为逃避气候变化,而其他物种则不能,这类似于古生物学的气候庇护假说。将体型和活动灵活性特征纳入未来的灭绝风险预测中,应该会大大提高其对保护和管理的预测效用。