Lemoine Nathan P
Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, Miami, Florida, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 23;10(2):e0118614. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118614. eCollection 2015.
Climate change can profoundly alter species' distributions due to changes in temperature, precipitation, or seasonality. Migratory monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) may be particularly susceptible to climate-driven changes in host plant abundance or reduced overwintering habitat. For example, climate change may significantly reduce the availability of overwintering habitat by restricting the amount of area with suitable microclimate conditions. However, potential effects of climate change on monarch northward migrations remain largely unknown, particularly with respect to their milkweed (Asclepias spp.) host plants. Given that monarchs largely depend on the genus Asclepias as larval host plants, the effects of climate change on monarch northward migrations will most likely be mediated by climate change effects on Asclepias. Here, I used MaxEnt species distribution modeling to assess potential changes in Asclepias and monarch distributions under moderate and severe climate change scenarios. First, Asclepias distributions were projected to extend northward throughout much of Canada despite considerable variability in the environmental drivers of each individual species. Second, Asclepias distributions were an important predictor of current monarch distributions, indicating that monarchs may be constrained as much by the availability of Asclepias host plants as environmental variables per se. Accordingly, modeling future distributions of monarchs, and indeed any tightly coupled plant-insect system, should incorporate the effects of climate change on host plant distributions. Finally, MaxEnt predictions of Asclepias and monarch distributions were remarkably consistent among general circulation models. Nearly all models predicted that the current monarch summer breeding range will become slightly less suitable for Asclepias and monarchs in the future. Asclepias, and consequently monarchs, should therefore undergo expanded northern range limits in summer months while encountering reduced habitat suitability throughout the northern migration.
气候变化可因温度、降水或季节变化而深刻改变物种分布。迁徙的黑脉金斑蝶(Danaus plexippus)可能特别容易受到气候驱动的寄主植物丰度变化或越冬栖息地减少的影响。例如,气候变化可能通过限制适宜小气候条件的面积,显著减少越冬栖息地的可用性。然而,气候变化对黑脉金斑蝶向北迁徙的潜在影响在很大程度上仍不为人知,尤其是在其马利筋(Asclepias spp.)寄主植物方面。鉴于黑脉金斑蝶在很大程度上依赖马利筋属植物作为幼虫寄主植物,气候变化对黑脉金斑蝶向北迁徙的影响很可能是由气候变化对马利筋的影响所介导的。在此,我使用最大熵物种分布模型来评估在中度和重度气候变化情景下马利筋和黑脉金斑蝶分布的潜在变化。首先,尽管每个物种的环境驱动因素存在相当大的变异性,但预计马利筋的分布将在加拿大大部分地区向北扩展。其次,马利筋的分布是当前黑脉金斑蝶分布的一个重要预测指标,这表明黑脉金斑蝶可能受到马利筋寄主植物可用性的限制,程度与环境变量本身相当。因此,对黑脉金斑蝶以及实际上任何紧密耦合的植物 - 昆虫系统的未来分布进行建模时,应纳入气候变化对寄主植物分布的影响。最后,最大熵模型对马利筋和黑脉金斑蝶分布的预测在全球环流模型之间非常一致。几乎所有模型都预测,当前黑脉金斑蝶夏季繁殖范围在未来对马利筋和黑脉金斑蝶来说适宜性将略有降低。因此,马利筋以及随之而来的黑脉金斑蝶,在夏季月份应会经历向北扩展的分布范围界限,同时在整个向北迁徙过程中遇到栖息地适宜性降低的情况。