Gardner Janet L, Rowley Eleanor, de Rebeira Perry, de Rebeira Alma, Brouwer Lyanne
Division of Ecology and Evolution, Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, 0200 Australian Capital Territory, Australia
53 Swan Street, Guildford, Western Australia 6055, Australia.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Jun 19;372(1723). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0148.
Despite abundant evidence that natural populations are responding to climate change, there are few demonstrations of how extreme climatic events (ECEs) affect fitness. Climate warming increases adverse effects of exposure to high temperatures, but also exposure to cold ECEs. Here, we investigate variation in survival associated with severity of summer and winter conditions, and whether survival is better predicted by ECEs than mean temperatures using data from two coexisting bird species monitored over 37 years in southwestern Australia, red-winged fairy-wrens, and white-browed scrubwrens, Changes in survival were associated with temperature extremes more strongly than average temperatures. In scrubwrens, winter ECEs were associated with survival within the same season. In both species, survival was associated with body size, and there was evidence that size-dependent mortality was mediated by carry-over effects of climate in the previous season. For fairy-wrens, mean body size declined over time but this could not be explained by size-dependent mortality as the effects of body size on survival were consistently positive. Our study demonstrates how ECEs can have individual-level effects on survival that are not reflected in long-term morphological change, and the same climatic conditions can affect similar-sized, coexisting species in different ways.This article is part of the themed issue 'Behavioural, ecological and evolutionary responses to extreme climatic events'.
尽管有大量证据表明自然种群正在对气候变化做出反应,但关于极端气候事件(ECEs)如何影响适合度的研究却很少。气候变暖不仅增加了暴露于高温下的不利影响,也增加了暴露于寒冷极端气候事件下的影响。在这里,我们利用在澳大利亚西南部对两种共存鸟类——红翅细尾鹩莺和白眉丛林鹩莺——进行了37年监测的数据,研究了与夏季和冬季条件严重程度相关的存活率变化,以及极端气候事件是否比平均温度更能预测存活率。存活率的变化与极端温度的关联比与平均温度的关联更强。在丛林鹩莺中,冬季极端气候事件与同一季节内的存活率相关。在这两个物种中,存活率都与体型有关,并且有证据表明,体型依赖性死亡率是由上一季气候的遗留效应介导的。对于细尾鹩莺来说,平均体型随时间下降,但这不能用体型依赖性死亡率来解释,因为体型对存活率的影响一直是积极的。我们的研究表明,极端气候事件如何能够对存活率产生个体层面的影响,而这种影响并未反映在长期的形态变化中,并且相同的气候条件可以以不同方式影响体型相似、共存的物种。本文是主题为“对极端气候事件的行为、生态和进化反应”的特刊的一部分。