Meyer Wallace M, Eble Jeffrey A, Franklin Kimberly, McManus Reilly B, Brantley Sandra L, Henkel Jeff, Marek Paul E, Hall W Eugene, Olson Carl A, McInroy Ryan, Bernal Loaiza Emmanuel M, Brusca Richard C, Moore Wendy
Department of Entomology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, United States of America.
Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Sep 2;10(9):e0135210. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0135210. eCollection 2015.
The few studies that have addressed past effects of climate change on species distributions have mostly focused on plants due to the rarity of historical faunal baselines. However, hyperdiverse groups like Arthropoda are vital to monitor in order to understand climate change impacts on biodiversity. This is the first investigation of ground-dwelling arthropod (GDA) assemblages along the full elevation gradient of a mountain range in the Madrean Sky Island Region, establishing a baseline for monitoring future changes in GDA biodiversity. To determine how GDA assemblages relate to elevation, season, abiotic variables, and corresponding biomes, GDA were collected for two weeks in both spring (May) and summer (September) 2011 in the Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona, using pitfall traps at 66 sites in six distinct upland (non-riparian/non-wet canyon) biomes. Four arthropod taxa: (1) beetles (Coleoptera), (2) spiders (Araneae), (3) grasshoppers and crickets (Orthoptera), and (4) millipedes and centipedes (Myriapoda) were assessed together and separately to determine if there are similar patterns across taxonomic groups. We collected 335 species of GDA: 192/3793 (species/specimens) Coleoptera, 102/1329 Araneae, 25/523 Orthoptera, and 16/697 Myriapoda. GDA assemblages differed among all biomes and between seasons. Fifty-three percent (178 species) and 76% (254 species) of all GDA species were found in only one biome and during only one season, respectively. While composition of arthropod assemblages is tied to biome and season, individual groups do not show fully concordant patterns. Seventeen percent of the GDA species occurred only in the two highest-elevation biomes (Pine and Mixed Conifer Forests). Because these high elevation biomes are most threatened by climate change and they harbor a large percentage of unique arthropod species (11-25% depending on taxon), significant loss in arthropod diversity is likely in the Santa Catalina Mountains and other isolated mountain ranges in the Southwestern US.
过去气候变化对物种分布影响的相关研究较少,由于历史动物区系基线的稀缺,这些研究大多集中在植物上。然而,像节肢动物这样的高度多样化类群对于监测气候变化对生物多样性的影响至关重要。这是首次对马德雷天空岛地区山脉全海拔梯度上的地栖节肢动物(GDA)群落进行调查,为监测GDA生物多样性的未来变化建立了基线。为了确定GDA群落与海拔、季节、非生物变量以及相应生物群落的关系,2011年春季(5月)和夏季(9月)在亚利桑那州圣卡塔利娜山脉的六个不同高地(非河岸/非湿润峡谷)生物群落的66个地点,使用陷阱诱捕器收集了两周的GDA。对四个节肢动物类群:(1)甲虫(鞘翅目)、(2)蜘蛛(蜘蛛目)、(3)蚱蜢和蟋蟀(直翅目)以及(4)千足虫和蜈蚣(多足纲)进行了综合和单独评估,以确定不同分类群之间是否存在相似模式。我们共收集到335种GDA:鞘翅目192种/3793个标本、蜘蛛目102种/1329个标本、直翅目25种/523个标本、多足纲16种/697个标本。GDA群落在所有生物群落之间以及不同季节之间存在差异。所有GDA物种中分别有53%(178种)和76%(254种)仅在一个生物群落中以及仅在一个季节中被发现。虽然节肢动物群落的组成与生物群落和季节相关,但各个类群并不呈现完全一致的模式。17%的GDA物种仅出现在海拔最高的两个生物群落(松林和混交针叶林)中。由于这些高海拔生物群落受到气候变化的威胁最大,并且它们拥有很大比例的独特节肢动物物种(根据分类群不同,比例在11%-25%之间),圣卡塔利娜山脉以及美国西南部其他孤立山脉的节肢动物多样性很可能会大幅丧失。