Riley Megan E, Griffen Blaine D
Department of Biological Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, United States of America.
School of the Earth, Ocean, and Environment, Marine Science Program, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 May 4;12(5):e0176263. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0176263. eCollection 2017.
Range shifts and expansions resulting from global climate change have the potential to create novel communities with unique plant-animal interactions. Organisms expanding their range into novel biotic and abiotic environments may encounter selection pressures that alter traditional biogeographic patterns of life history traits. Here, we used field surveys to examine latitudinal patterns of life history traits in a broadly distributed ectotherm (mangrove tree crab Aratus pisonii) that has recently experienced a climate change-induced range expansion into a novel habitat type. Additionally, we conducted laboratory and field experiments to investigate characteristics associated with these life history traits (e.g. fecundity, offspring quality, and potential selection pressures). We compared these characteristics in native mangrove habitats in which the species has historically dwelled and novel salt marsh habitats into which the species has recently expanded its range. Consistent with traditional biogeographic concepts (i.e. Bergmann's clines), size at maturity and mean body size of reproductive females increased with latitude within the native habitat. However, they decreased significantly in novel habitats at the highest latitudes of the species' range, which was consistent with habitat-specific differences in both biotic (predation) and abiotic (temperature) selection pressures. Although initial maternal investment (egg volume and weight) did not differ between habitats, fecundity was lower in novel habitats as a result of differences in size at reproduction. Offspring quality, as measured by larval starvation resistance, was likewise diminished in novel habitats relative to native habitats. These differences in offspring quality may have enduring consequences for species success and persistence in novel habitats. Life history characteristics such as those investigated here are fundamental organismal traits; consequently, understanding the potential impacts of climate change responses on latitudinal patterns of these traits is key to understanding climate change impacts on natural systems.
全球气候变化导致的分布范围变化和扩张有可能创造出具有独特动植物相互作用的新型群落。生物体将其分布范围扩展到新的生物和非生物环境中时,可能会遇到选择压力,从而改变生活史特征的传统生物地理模式。在这里,我们通过实地调查,研究了一种分布广泛的变温动物(红树林树蟹Aratus pisonii)生活史特征的纬度模式,该物种最近因气候变化导致其分布范围扩展到一种新的栖息地类型。此外,我们还进行了实验室和实地实验,以研究与这些生活史特征相关的特性(如繁殖力、后代质量和潜在选择压力)。我们比较了该物种历史上栖息的原生红树林栖息地和该物种最近扩展到的新盐沼栖息地中的这些特性。与传统生物地理概念(即伯格曼法则)一致,在原生栖息地中,成熟时的体型和繁殖雌蟹的平均体型随纬度增加。然而,在该物种分布范围最高纬度的新栖息地中,它们显著减小,这与生物(捕食)和非生物(温度)选择压力在栖息地的差异一致。尽管不同栖息地之间初始母体投资(卵的体积和重量)没有差异,但由于繁殖时体型的差异,新栖息地的繁殖力较低。以幼虫抗饥饿能力衡量的后代质量在新栖息地中相对于原生栖息地同样降低。后代质量的这些差异可能对物种在新栖息地中的成功和持续存在产生持久影响。这里研究的生活史特征是基本的生物体特征;因此,了解气候变化响应对这些特征纬度模式的潜在影响是理解气候变化对自然系统影响的关键。