Panchen Zoe A, Gorelick Root
Department of Biology Carleton University Ottawa ON Canada.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Feb 1;7(5):1325-1338. doi: 10.1002/ece3.2702. eCollection 2017 Mar.
The pace of climate change in the Arctic is dramatic, with temperatures rising at a rate double the global average. The timing of flowering and fruiting (phenology) is often temperature dependent and tends to advance as the climate warms. Herbarium specimens, photographs, and field observations can provide historical phenology records and have been used, on a localised scale, to predict species' phenological sensitivity to climate change. Conducting similar localised studies in the Canadian Arctic, however, poses a challenge where the collection of herbarium specimens, photographs, and field observations have been temporally and spatially sporadic. We used flowering and seed dispersal times of 23 Arctic species from herbarium specimens, photographs, and field observations collected from across the 2.1 million km area of Nunavut, Canada, to determine (1) which monthly temperatures influence flowering and seed dispersal times; (2) species' phenological sensitivity to temperature; and (3) whether flowering or seed dispersal times have advanced over the past 120 years. We tested this at different spatial scales and compared the sensitivity in different regions of Nunavut. Broadly speaking, this research serves as a proof of concept to assess whether phenology-climate change studies using historic data can be conducted at large spatial scales. Flowering times and seed dispersal time were most strongly correlated with June and July temperatures, respectively. Seed dispersal times have advanced at double the rate of flowering times over the past 120 years, reflecting greater late-summer temperature rises in Nunavut. There is great diversity in the flowering time sensitivity to temperature of Arctic plant species, suggesting climate change implications for Arctic ecological communities, including altered community composition, competition, and pollinator interactions. Intraspecific temperature sensitivity and warming trends varied markedly across Nunavut and could result in greater changes in some parts of Nunavut than in others.
北极地区的气候变化速度惊人,气温上升速度是全球平均水平的两倍。植物开花和结果的时间(物候)通常取决于温度,并且往往会随着气候变暖而提前。植物标本馆的标本、照片和实地观察可以提供历史物候记录,并且已经在局部范围内用于预测物种对气候变化的物候敏感性。然而,在加拿大北极地区进行类似的局部研究面临挑战,因为植物标本馆标本、照片和实地观察的收集在时间和空间上都很零散。我们利用从加拿大努纳武特地区210万平方公里区域收集的植物标本馆标本、照片和实地观察资料,确定了23种北极物种的开花和种子传播时间,以确定(1)哪些月份的温度会影响开花和种子传播时间;(2)物种对温度的物候敏感性;以及(3)在过去120年里开花或种子传播时间是否提前。我们在不同的空间尺度上进行了测试,并比较了努纳武特不同地区的敏感性。从广义上讲,这项研究作为一个概念验证,以评估是否可以在大空间尺度上进行利用历史数据的物候-气候变化研究。开花时间和种子传播时间分别与6月和7月的温度相关性最强。在过去120年里,种子传播时间提前的速度是开花时间的两倍,这反映出努纳武特地区夏末气温上升幅度更大。北极植物物种对温度的开花时间敏感性存在很大差异,这表明气候变化对北极生态群落有影响,包括群落组成、竞争和传粉者相互作用的改变。努纳武特地区种内温度敏感性和变暖趋势差异显著,可能导致努纳武特某些地区的变化比其他地区更大。