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预测气候变化情景下高山有蹄类动物的未来。

Projecting the future of an alpine ungulate under climate change scenarios.

机构信息

Division of Wildlife Conservation, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Juneau, AK, USA.

Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA.

出版信息

Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Mar;24(3):1136-1149. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13919. Epub 2017 Oct 27.

Abstract

Climate change represents a primary threat to species persistence and biodiversity at a global scale. Cold adapted alpine species are especially sensitive to climate change and can offer key "early warning signs" about deleterious effects of predicted change. Among mountain ungulates, survival, a key determinant of demographic performance, may be influenced by future climate in complex, and possibly opposing ways. Demographic data collected from 447 mountain goats in 10 coastal Alaska, USA, populations over a 37-year time span indicated that survival is highest during low snowfall winters and cool summers. However, general circulation models (GCMs) predict future increase in summer temperature and decline in winter snowfall. To disentangle how these opposing climate-driven effects influence mountain goat populations, we developed an age-structured population model to project mountain goat population trajectories for 10 different GCM/emissions scenarios relevant for coastal Alaska. Projected increases in summer temperature had stronger negative effects on population trajectories than the positive demographic effects of reduced winter snowfall. In 5 of the 10 GCM/representative concentration pathway (RCP) scenarios, the net effect of projected climate change was extinction over a 70-year time window (2015-2085); smaller initial populations were more likely to go extinct faster than larger populations. Using a resource selection modeling approach, we determined that distributional shifts to higher elevation (i.e., "thermoneutral") summer range was unlikely to be a viable behavioral adaptation strategy; due to the conical shape of mountains, summer range was expected to decline by 17%-86% for 7 of the 10 GCM/RCP scenarios. Projected declines of mountain goat populations are driven by climate-linked bottom-up mechanisms and may have wide ranging implications for alpine ecosystems. These analyses elucidate how projected climate change can negatively alter population dynamics of a sentinel alpine species and provide insight into how demographic modeling can be used to assess risk to species persistence.

摘要

气候变化是全球范围内物种生存和生物多样性的主要威胁。适应寒冷的高山物种对气候变化特别敏感,它们可以提供有关预测变化的有害影响的关键“早期预警信号”。在山地有蹄类动物中,生存是决定种群表现的关键因素,它可能会受到未来气候的复杂且可能相反的影响。从美国阿拉斯加沿海 10 个地区的 447 只山羊收集的 37 年时间跨度的种群数据表明,在降雪量低和夏季凉爽的冬季,生存率最高。然而,通用环流模型(GCM)预测夏季温度升高和冬季降雪量减少。为了理清这些相反的气候驱动因素如何影响山羊种群,我们开发了一个年龄结构的种群模型,以预测阿拉斯加沿海地区 10 种不同 GCM/排放情景下的山羊种群轨迹。预测的夏季温度升高对种群轨迹的负面影响强于冬季降雪减少的正向人口效应。在 10 种 GCM/代表性浓度途径(RCP)情景中的 5 种情景中,预计气候变化的净效应是在 70 年的时间窗口(2015-2085 年)内灭绝;初始种群较小的灭绝速度比初始种群较大的灭绝速度更快。使用资源选择模型方法,我们确定向高海拔(即“热中性”)夏季范围的分布转移不太可能成为一种可行的行为适应策略;由于山脉的圆锥形形状,预计在 10 种 GCM/RCP 情景中的 7 种情景中,夏季范围将减少 17%-86%。山羊种群的预计下降是由与气候相关的自下而上的机制驱动的,这可能对高山生态系统产生广泛影响。这些分析阐明了预计的气候变化如何对高山指示物种的种群动态产生负面影响,并提供了关于人口模型如何用于评估物种生存风险的见解。

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