Isaak Daniel J, Young Michael K, Luce Charles H, Hostetler Steven W, Wenger Seth J, Peterson Erin E, Ver Hoef Jay M, Groce Matthew C, Horan Dona L, Nagel David E
US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, Boise, ID 83702;
US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, Missoula, MT 59801;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Apr 19;113(16):4374-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1522429113. Epub 2016 Apr 4.
The imminent demise of montane species is a recurrent theme in the climate change literature, particularly for aquatic species that are constrained to networks and elevational rather than latitudinal retreat as temperatures increase. Predictions of widespread species losses, however, have yet to be fulfilled despite decades of climate change, suggesting that trends are much weaker than anticipated and may be too subtle for detection given the widespread use of sparse water temperature datasets or imprecise surrogates like elevation and air temperature. Through application of large water-temperature databases evaluated for sensitivity to historical air-temperature variability and computationally interpolated to provide high-resolution thermal habitat information for a 222,000-km network, we estimate a less dire thermal plight for cold-water species within mountains of the northwestern United States. Stream warming rates and climate velocities were both relatively low for 1968-2011 (average warming rate = 0.101 °C/decade; median velocity = 1.07 km/decade) when air temperatures warmed at 0.21 °C/decade. Many cold-water vertebrate species occurred in a subset of the network characterized by low climate velocities, and three native species of conservation concern occurred in extremely cold, slow velocity environments (0.33-0.48 km/decade). Examination of aggressive warming scenarios indicated that although network climate velocities could increase, they remain low in headwaters because of strong local temperature gradients associated with topographic controls. Better information about changing hydrology and disturbance regimes is needed to complement these results, but rather than being climatic cul-de-sacs, many mountain streams appear poised to be redoubts for cold-water biodiversity this century.
山地物种即将灭绝是气候变化文献中反复出现的主题,对于那些因温度升高而只能在水系网络中向高处而非向纬度更低处迁移的水生物种而言尤其如此。然而,尽管气候变化已历经数十年,但广泛物种灭绝的预测尚未实现,这表明实际趋势比预期的要弱得多,而且鉴于广泛使用的稀疏水温数据集或海拔和气温等不精确替代指标,这些趋势可能过于细微而难以察觉。通过应用大型水温数据库,该数据库经过评估对历史气温变化具有敏感性,并通过计算进行插值以提供22.2万公里水系网络的高分辨率热栖息地信息,我们估计美国西北部山区冷水物种面临的热困境没那么严峻。1968年至2011年期间,溪流升温速率和气候速度都相对较低(平均升温速率 = 0.101℃/十年;中位速度 = 1.07公里/十年),而当时气温以0.21℃/十年的速度上升。许多冷水脊椎动物物种出现在网络中气候速度较低的子集中,并且有三种受保护的本地物种出现在极冷、速度缓慢的环境中(0.33 - 0.48公里/十年)。对激进变暖情景的研究表明,尽管网络气候速度可能会增加,但由于与地形控制相关的强烈局部温度梯度,源头地区的气候速度仍然较低。需要更好地了解不断变化的水文和干扰状况来补充这些结果,但许多山区溪流并非气候死胡同,本世纪它们似乎有望成为冷水生物多样性的堡垒。