Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, St Petersburg, FL, USA.
School of Environment Arts and Society (SEAS), Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2017 Oct;23(10):4045-4057. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13761. Epub 2017 Jun 8.
Global climate forecasts predict changes in the frequency and intensity of extreme climate events (ECEs). The capacity for specific habitat patches within a landscape to modulate stressors from extreme climate events, and animal distribution throughout habitat matrices during events, could influence the degree of population level effects following the passage of ECEs. Here, we ask (i) does the intensity of stressors of an ECE vary across a landscape? And (ii) Do habitat use patterns of a mobile species influence their vulnerability to ECEs? Specifically, we measured how extreme cold spells might interact with temporal variability in habitat use to affect populations of a tropical, estuarine-dependent large-bodied fish Common Snook, within Everglades National Park estuaries (FL US). We examined temperature variation across the estuary during cold disturbances with different degrees of severity, including an extreme cold spell. Second, we quantified Snook distribution patterns when the passage of ECEs is most likely to occur from 2012 to 2016 using passive acoustic tracking. Our results revealed spatial heterogeneity in the intensity of temperature declines during cold disturbances, with some habitats being consistently 3-5°C colder than others. Surprisingly, Snook distributions during periods of greatest risk to experience an extreme cold event varied among years. During the winters of 2013-2014 and 2014-2015 a greater proportion of Snook occurred in the colder habitats, while the winters of 2012-2013 and 2015-2016 featured more Snook observed in the warmest habitats. This study shows that Snook habitat use patterns could influence vulnerability to extreme cold events, however, whether Snook habitat use increases or decreases their vulnerability to disturbance depends on the year, creating temporally dynamic vulnerability. Faunal global change research should address the spatially explicit nature of extreme climate events and animal habitat use patterns to identify potential mechanisms that may influence population effects following these disturbances.
全球气候预测预测极端气候事件 (ECEs) 的频率和强度会发生变化。景观中特定生境斑块调节极端气候事件应激源的能力,以及动物在事件过程中在生境基质中的分布,可能会影响 ECE 过后种群水平效应的程度。在这里,我们提出了以下两个问题:(i)ECE 的应激源强度是否会在景观中发生变化?(ii) 移动物种的生境利用模式是否会影响它们对 ECE 的脆弱性?具体来说,我们测量了极端寒冷天气如何与生境利用的时间变化相互作用,从而影响大佛罗里达州埃弗格莱兹国家公园河口(FL US)中一种依赖热带河口的大型鱼类普通军曹鱼的种群。我们在不同严重程度的寒冷干扰期间测量了河口的温度变化,包括一次极端寒冷天气。其次,我们在 2012 年至 2016 年期间最有可能发生 ECE 时,使用被动声学跟踪技术量化了军曹鱼的分布模式。我们的结果显示,在寒冷干扰期间,温度下降的强度存在空间异质性,一些生境比其他生境始终低 3-5°C。令人惊讶的是,在经历极端寒冷事件风险最大的时期,军曹鱼的分布在不同年份有所不同。在 2013-2014 年和 2014-2015 年的冬季,更多的军曹鱼出现在较冷的生境中,而在 2012-2013 年和 2015-2016 年的冬季,观察到更多的军曹鱼出现在最温暖的生境中。本研究表明,军曹鱼的生境利用模式可能会影响其对极端寒冷事件的脆弱性,然而,军曹鱼生境利用是增加还是减少其对干扰的脆弱性取决于年份,从而产生了时间上动态的脆弱性。动物全球变化研究应该解决极端气候事件和动物生境利用模式的空间明确性质,以确定可能影响这些干扰后种群效应的潜在机制。