Flousek Jiří, Telenský Tomáš, Hanzelka Jan, Reif Jiří
Krkonoše National Park Administration, Dobrovského 3, CZ-543 01, Vrchlabí, Czech Republic.
Institute for Environmental Studies, Faculty of Science, Charles University in Prague, Benátská 2, CZ-128 01, Praha 2, Czech Republic; Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, v. v. i., Květná 8, Brno, 603 65, Czech Republic; Czech Society for Ornithology, Na Bělidle 34, CZ-150 00, Praha 5, Czech Republic.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 1;10(10):e0139465. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0139465. eCollection 2015.
Climate change is among the most important global threats to biodiversity and mountain areas are supposed to be under especially high pressure. Although recent modelling studies suggest considerable future range contractions of montane species accompanied with increased extinction risk, data allowing to test actual population consequences of the observed climate changes and identifying traits associated to their adverse impacts are very scarce. To fill this knowledge gap, we estimated long-term population trends of montane birds from 1984 to 2011 in a central European mountain range, the Giant Mountains (Krkonoše), where significant warming occurred over this period. We then related the population trends to several species' traits related to the climate change effects. We found that the species breeding in various habitats at higher altitudes had more negative trends than species breeding at lower altitudes. We also found that the species moved upwards as a response to warming climate, and these altitudinal range shifts were associated with more positive population trends at lower altitudes than at higher altitudes. Moreover, long-distance migrants declined more than residents or species migrating for shorter distances. Taken together, these results indicate that the climate change, besides other possible environmental changes, already influences populations of montane birds with particularly adverse impacts on high-altitude species such as water pipit (Anthus spinoletta). It is evident that the alpine species, predicted to undergo serious climatically induced range contractions due to warming climate in the future, already started moving along this trajectory.
气候变化是对生物多样性最重要的全球威胁之一,山区被认为面临着特别高的压力。尽管最近的模型研究表明,山地物种未来的分布范围将大幅收缩,灭绝风险增加,但能够检验观测到的气候变化对实际种群的影响并确定与其不利影响相关特征的数据却非常稀少。为了填补这一知识空白,我们估计了1984年至2011年中欧山脉巨人山脉(克尔科诺谢山)中山区鸟类的长期种群趋势,在此期间该地区出现了显著变暖。然后,我们将种群趋势与几个与气候变化影响相关的物种特征联系起来。我们发现,在较高海拔的各种栖息地繁殖的物种,其种群趋势比在较低海拔繁殖的物种更为消极。我们还发现,物种会随着气候变暖而向上迁移,这些海拔范围的变化与较低海拔地区比高海拔地区更积极的种群趋势相关。此外,长距离迁徙鸟类的数量下降幅度大于留鸟或短距离迁徙的物种。综上所述,这些结果表明,除了其他可能的环境变化外,气候变化已经在影响山区鸟类的种群,对诸如水鹨(Anthus spinoletta)等高海拔物种产生了特别不利的影响。很明显,预计未来由于气候变暖将经历严重气候导致的分布范围收缩的高山物种,已经开始沿着这条轨迹移动。