Deguines Nicolas, Brashares Justin S, Prugh Laura R
School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of Washington, Winkenwerder Hall, W Stevens Way NE, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.
Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California Berkeley, Mulford Hall, Hilgard Way, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2017 Mar;86(2):262-272. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12614. Epub 2017 Jan 4.
Climate change is transforming precipitation regimes world-wide. Changes in precipitation regimes are known to have powerful effects on plant productivity, but the consequences of these shifts for the dynamics of ecological communities are poorly understood. This knowledge gap hinders our ability to anticipate and mitigate the impacts of climate change on biodiversity. Precipitation may affect fauna through direct effects on physiology, behaviour or demography, through plant-mediated indirect effects, or by modifying interactions among species. In this paper, we examined the response of a semi-arid ecological community to a fivefold change in precipitation over 7 years. We examined the effects of precipitation on the dynamics of a grassland ecosystem in central California from 2007 to 2013. We conducted vegetation surveys, pitfall trapping of invertebrates, visual surveys of lizards and capture-mark-recapture surveys of rodents on 30 plots each year. We used structural equation modelling to evaluate the direct, indirect and modifying effects of precipitation on plants, ants, beetles, orthopterans, kangaroo rats, ground squirrels and lizards. We found pervasive effects of precipitation on the ecological community. Although precipitation increased plant biomass, direct effects on fauna were often stronger than plant-mediated effects. In addition, precipitation altered the sign or strength of consumer-resource and facilitative interactions among the faunal community such that negative or neutral interactions became positive or vice versa with increasing precipitation. These findings indicate that precipitation influences ecological communities in multiple ways beyond its recognized effects on primary productivity. Stochastic variation in precipitation may weaken the average strength of biotic interactions over time, thereby increasing ecosystem stability and resilience to climate change.
气候变化正在改变全球的降水模式。众所周知,降水模式的变化对植物生产力有着强大的影响,但这些变化对生态群落动态的影响却知之甚少。这一知识空白阻碍了我们预测和减轻气候变化对生物多样性影响的能力。降水可能通过对生理、行为或种群统计学的直接影响,通过植物介导的间接影响,或通过改变物种间的相互作用来影响动物群落。在本文中,我们研究了一个半干旱生态群落在7年时间里对降水五倍变化的响应。我们考察了2007年至2013年降水对加利福尼亚中部一个草原生态系统动态的影响。我们每年在30个样地进行植被调查、无脊椎动物陷阱诱捕、蜥蜴目视调查以及啮齿动物标记重捕调查。我们使用结构方程模型来评估降水对植物、蚂蚁、甲虫、直翅目昆虫、更格卢鼠、地松鼠和蜥蜴的直接、间接和调节作用。我们发现降水对生态群落有广泛影响。虽然降水增加了植物生物量,但对动物群落的直接影响往往比植物介导的影响更强。此外,降水改变了动物群落中消费者 - 资源和促进性相互作用的符号或强度,使得随着降水增加,负相互作用或中性相互作用变为正相互作用,反之亦然。这些发现表明,降水对生态群落的影响方式不止于其对初级生产力的公认影响。降水的随机变化可能会随着时间推移削弱生物相互作用的平均强度,从而提高生态系统对气候变化的稳定性和恢复力。