Jaramillo Eduardo, Dugan Jenifer E, Hubbard David M, Contreras Heraldo, Duarte Cristian, Acuña Emilio, Schoeman David S
Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad Austral de Chile, Valdivia, Chile.
Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 May 8;12(5):e0177116. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177116. eCollection 2017.
Predicting responses of coastal ecosystems to altered sea surface temperatures (SST) associated with global climate change, requires knowledge of demographic responses of individual species. Body size is an excellent metric because it scales strongly with growth and fecundity for many ectotherms. These attributes can underpin demographic as well as community and ecosystem level processes, providing valuable insights for responses of vulnerable coastal ecosystems to changing climate. We investigated contemporary macroscale patterns in body size among widely distributed crustaceans that comprise the majority of intertidal abundance and biomass of sandy beach ecosystems of the eastern Pacific coasts of Chile and California, USA. We focused on ecologically important species representing different tidal zones, trophic guilds and developmental modes, including a high-shore macroalga-consuming talitrid amphipod (Orchestoidea tuberculata), two mid-shore scavenging cirolanid isopods (Excirolana braziliensis and E. hirsuticauda), and a low-shore suspension-feeding hippid crab (Emerita analoga) with an amphitropical distribution. Significant latitudinal patterns in body sizes were observed for all species in Chile (21° - 42°S), with similar but steeper patterns in Emerita analoga, in California (32°- 41°N). Sea surface temperature was a strong predictor of body size (-4% to -35% °C-1) in all species. Beach characteristics were subsidiary predictors of body size. Alterations in ocean temperatures of even a few degrees associated with global climate change are likely to affect body sizes of important intertidal ectotherms, with consequences for population demography, life history, community structure, trophic interactions, food-webs, and indirect effects such as ecosystem function. The consistency of results for body size and temperature across species with different life histories, feeding modes, ecological roles, and microhabitats inhabiting a single widespread coastal ecosystem, and for one species, across hemispheres in this space-for-time substitution, suggests predictions of ecosystem responses to thermal effects of climate change may potentially be generalised, with important implications for coastal conservation.
预测沿海生态系统对与全球气候变化相关的海表温度(SST)变化的响应,需要了解单个物种的种群统计学响应。体型是一个很好的衡量指标,因为对于许多变温动物来说,它与生长和繁殖力密切相关。这些属性可以支撑种群统计学以及群落和生态系统层面的过程,为脆弱的沿海生态系统对气候变化的响应提供有价值的见解。我们研究了广泛分布的甲壳类动物的当代宏观体型模式,这些甲壳类动物构成了智利和美国加利福尼亚州东太平洋沿岸沙滩生态系统潮间带丰度和生物量的大部分。我们关注代表不同潮间带、营养类群和发育模式的具有生态重要性的物种,包括一种以高岸大型藻类为食的塔利特双足虾(Orchestoidea tuberculata)、两种中岸食腐的卷足类等足动物(巴西卷足虾(Excirolana braziliensis)和多毛卷足虾(E. hirsuticauda)),以及一种分布于两半球的低岸滤食性蝉蟹(Emerita analoga)。在智利(南纬21° - 42°),所有物种都观察到显著的体型纬度模式,在加利福尼亚(北纬32° - 41°),Emerita analoga的体型模式相似但更明显。海表温度是所有物种体型的强预测因子(-4%至-35% °C-1)。海滩特征是体型的次要预测因子。与全球气候变化相关的即使几度的海洋温度变化,都可能影响重要潮间带变温动物的体型,进而影响种群统计学、生活史、群落结构、营养相互作用、食物网以及生态系统功能等间接效应。在这个空间换时间的替代研究中,对于生活在单一广泛沿海生态系统中具有不同生活史、摄食模式、生态作用和微生境的物种,以及对于一个物种在两半球的体型和温度结果的一致性,表明对气候变化热效应的生态系统响应预测可能具有普遍性,这对沿海保护具有重要意义。