Department of Environment and Agro-biotechnologies, Centre de Recherche Public - Gabriel Lippmann, 41, rue du Brill, L-4422 Belvaux, Luxembourg.
Department of Environment and Agro-biotechnologies, Centre de Recherche Public - Gabriel Lippmann, 41, rue du Brill, L-4422 Belvaux, Luxembourg.
Sci Total Environ. 2015 Feb 1;505:1112-26. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.10.077. Epub 2014 Nov 11.
Headwaters account for a high proportion of total freshwater stream-channel length in a drainage basin and are critical habitats for rare, endangered, and specialized species. In the context of climate warming, increasing water temperatures may be an ultimate threat to cold-adapted species even in temperate ecosystems. Climate change effects on streams may interact with other pressures such as pollution or habitat fragmentation, confounding their real impact on biological communities. Three headwater streams exposed to contrasted shading and land use conditions were sampled over a three-year period in spring and autumn (2010-2012). Five stations distributed along the longitudinal continuum were chosen in the upstream part of each stream. In addition to benthic invertebrate sampling, water temperature was recorded continuously using data loggers. Results showed that the riparian woodland associated with forested land use throughout the catchment clearly moderated winter temperature minima, summer temperature maxima and thermal variability compared to open river channels with narrow or absent riparian tree cover. Although, the variability in macroinvertebrate species distribution was mainly attributed to anthropogenic land use in the catchment, a significant part of the variability was explained by temperature descriptors such as the number of cumulative degree-days in summer and extremes in winter temperature. Trichoptera species preferring headwaters and cold water temperatures were found exclusively in the forested unimpacted stream. Conservation issues are discussed in relation to the predicted loss of the potential future distributions of these Trichoptera cold-adapted species.
源头在流域中占总淡水河道长度的很大比例,是稀有、濒危和特有物种的关键栖息地。在气候变暖的背景下,即使在温带生态系统中,水温升高也可能成为冷水适应物种的最终威胁。气候变化对溪流的影响可能与其他压力(如污染或生境破碎化)相互作用,使其对生物群落的实际影响变得复杂。在三年内(2010-2012 年),对三个受遮蔽和土地利用条件影响的源头溪流进行了采样。在每个溪流的上游部分选择了沿纵向连续体分布的五个站点。除了底栖无脊椎动物采样外,还使用数据记录器连续记录水温。结果表明,与无植被或植被狭窄的开阔河道相比,流域内整个森林土地利用相关的河岸林地明显缓和了冬季温度最低值、夏季温度最高值和温度变异性。尽管,大型无脊椎动物物种分布的可变性主要归因于集水区的人为土地利用,但温度描述符(如夏季累积度日数和冬季温度极值)解释了很大一部分可变性。偏好源头和冷水温度的蜉蝣目物种仅在未受干扰的森林溪流中发现。根据这些对冷水适应的蜉蝣目物种未来潜在分布可能丧失的预测,讨论了保护问题。