The Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore City, 119077 Singapore City, Singapore.
School of Biosciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, 3010, Vic., Australia.
Glob Chang Biol. 2015 Aug;21(8):3005-20. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12930. Epub 2015 Jun 8.
Dominant species influence the composition and abundance of other species present in ecosystems. However, forecasts of distributional change under future climates have predominantly focused on changes in species distribution and ignored possible changes in spatial and temporal patterns of dominance. We develop forecasts of spatial changes for the distribution of species dominance, defined in terms of basal area, and for species occurrence, in response to sea level rise for three tree taxa within an extensive mangrove ecosystem in northern Australia. Three new metrics are provided, indicating the area expected to be suitable under future conditions (Eoccupied ), the instability of suitable area (Einstability ) and the overlap between the current and future spatial distribution (Eoverlap ). The current dominance and occurrence were modelled in relation to a set of environmental variables using boosted regression tree (BRT) models, under two scenarios of seedling establishment: unrestricted and highly restricted. While forecasts of spatial change were qualitatively similar for species occurrence and dominance, the models of species dominance exhibited higher metrics of model fit and predictive performance, and the spatial pattern of future dominance was less similar to the current pattern than was the case for the distributions of species occurrence. This highlights the possibility of greater changes in the spatial patterning of mangrove tree species dominance under future sea level rise. Under the restricted seedling establishment scenario, the area occupied by or dominated by a species declined between 42.1% and 93.8%, while for unrestricted seedling establishment, the area suitable for dominance or occurrence of each species varied from a decline of 68.4% to an expansion of 99.5%. As changes in the spatial patterning of dominance are likely to cause a cascade of effects throughout the ecosystem, forecasting spatial changes in dominance provides new and complementary information in addition to that provided by forecasts of species occurrence.
优势物种会影响生态系统中其他物种的组成和丰度。然而,未来气候下分布变化的预测主要集中在物种分布的变化上,而忽略了优势物种在时空格局上可能发生的变化。我们针对澳大利亚北部一个大型红树林生态系统中的三种树木,预测了物种优势(用基面积表示)和物种出现的空间变化,以应对海平面上升。我们提供了三个新的指标,分别表示在未来条件下预计适宜的区域(Eoccupied )、适宜区域的不稳定性(Einstability )以及当前和未来空间分布的重叠程度(Eoverlap )。在两种幼苗建立情景(无限制和高度限制)下,我们使用提升回归树(BRT)模型,根据一组环境变量对当前优势和出现情况进行建模。尽管物种出现和优势的空间变化预测结果在定性上相似,但物种优势模型表现出更高的模型拟合和预测性能指标,并且未来优势的空间模式与当前模式的相似性低于物种出现分布的情况。这突出表明,在未来海平面上升的情况下,红树林树种优势的空间格局可能会发生更大的变化。在限制幼苗建立的情景下,物种占据或主导的区域减少了 42.1%至 93.8%,而在无限制幼苗建立的情景下,每种物种适宜优势或出现的区域变化范围从减少 68.4%到扩大 99.5%。由于优势的空间格局变化可能会在整个生态系统中引发一系列的影响,因此预测优势的空间变化除了提供物种出现的预测信息外,还提供了新的、补充性的信息。