Tuff K T, Tuff T, Davies K F
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado Boulder, CO, 80309, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2016 Apr;19(4):361-74. doi: 10.1111/ele.12579. Epub 2016 Feb 19.
Habitat fragmentation changes thermal conditions in remnant patches, and thermal conditions strongly influence organism morphology, distribution, and activity patterns. However, few studies explore temperature as a mechanism driving ecological responses to fragmentation. Here we offer a conceptual framework that integrates thermal biology into fragmentation research to better understand individual, species, community, and ecosystem-level responses to fragmentation. Specifically, the framework addresses how fragmentation changes temperature and how the effects of those temperature changes spread through the ecosystem, from organism response via thermal sensitivity, to changes in species distribution and activity patterns, to shifts in community structure following species' responses, and ultimately to changes in ecosystem functions. We place a strong emphasis on future research directions by outlining "Critical gaps" for each step of the framework. Empirical efforts to apply and test this framework promise new understanding of fragmentation's ecological consequences and new strategies for conservation in an increasingly fragmented and warmer world.
栖息地破碎化改变了残留斑块中的热状况,而热状况强烈影响生物体的形态、分布和活动模式。然而,很少有研究将温度作为驱动对破碎化的生态响应的一种机制来探讨。在此,我们提供一个概念框架,将热生物学纳入破碎化研究,以更好地理解个体、物种、群落和生态系统层面上对破碎化的响应。具体而言,该框架阐述了破碎化如何改变温度,以及这些温度变化的影响如何在生态系统中传播,从通过热敏感性引起的生物体响应,到物种分布和活动模式的变化,再到物种响应后群落结构的转变,最终到生态系统功能的变化。我们通过概述该框架每个步骤的“关键差距”,大力强调未来的研究方向。应用和测试这个框架的实证工作有望为日益破碎化和变暖的世界中破碎化的生态后果带来新的理解,并为保护提供新的策略。