Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology, University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Tennessee Aquarium Conservation Institute, 175 Baylor School Road, Chattanooga, TN 37405, USA.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2018 Aug;93(3):1634-1648. doi: 10.1111/brv.12410. Epub 2018 Mar 25.
The projected rise in global mean sea levels places many freshwater turtle species at risk of saltwater intrusion into freshwater habitats. Freshwater turtles are disproportionately more threatened than other taxa; thus, understanding the role of salinity in determining their contemporary distribution and evolution should be a research priority. Freshwater turtles are a slowly evolving lineage; however, they can adapt physiologically or behaviourally to various levels of salinity and, therefore, temporarily occur in marine or brackish environments. Here, we provide the first comprehensive global review on freshwater turtle use and tolerance of brackish water ecosystems. We link together current knowledge of geographic occurrence, salinity tolerance, phylogenetic relationships, and physiological and behavioural mechanisms to generate a baseline understanding of the response of freshwater turtles to changing saline environments. We also review the potential origins of salinity tolerance in freshwater turtles. Finally, we integrate 2100 sea level rise (SLR) projections, species distribution maps, literature gathered on brackish water use, and a phylogeny to predict the exposure of freshwater turtles to projected SLR globally. From our synthesis of published literature and available data, we build a framework for spatial and phylogenetic conservation prioritization of coastal freshwater turtles. Based on our literature review, 70 species (∼30% of coastal freshwater turtle species) from 10 of the 11 freshwater turtle families have been reported in brackish water ecosystems. Most anecdotal records, observations, and descriptions do not imply long-term salinity tolerance among freshwater turtles. Rather, experiments show that some species exhibit potential for adaptation and plasticity in physiological, behavioural, and life-history traits that enable them to endure varying periods (e.g. days or months) and levels of saltwater exposure. Species that specialize on brackish water habitats are likely to be vulnerable to SLR because of their exclusive coastal distributions and adaptations to a narrow range of salinities. Most species, however, have not been documented in brackish water habitats but may also be highly vulnerable to projected SLR. Our analysis suggests that approximately 90% of coastal freshwater turtle species assessed in our study will be affected by a 1-m increase in global mean SLR by 2100. Most at risk are freshwater turtles found in New Guinea, Southeast Asia, Australia, and North and South America that may lose more than 10% of their present geographic range. In addition, turtle species in the families Chelidae, Emydidae, and Trionychidae may experience the greatest exposure to projected SLR in their present geographic ranges. Better understanding of survival, growth, reproductive and population-level responses to SLR will improve region-specific population viability predictions of freshwater turtles that are increasingly exposed to SLR. Integrating phylogenetic, physiological, and spatial frameworks to assess the effects of projected SLR may improve identification of vulnerable species, guilds, and geographic regions in need of conservation prioritization. We conclude that the use of brackish and marine environments by freshwater turtles provides clues about the evolutionary processes that have prolonged their existence, shaped their unique coastal distributions, and may prove useful in predicting their response to a changing world.
预计全球海平面上升将使许多淡水龟物种面临海水侵入淡水栖息地的风险。淡水龟比其他类群受到的威胁更大;因此,了解盐分在决定它们当代分布和进化中的作用应该是一个研究重点。淡水龟是一个进化缓慢的谱系;然而,它们可以在生理或行为上适应各种盐度水平,因此可以暂时出现在海洋或半咸水环境中。在这里,我们提供了关于淡水龟利用和耐受咸水生态系统的首次全面全球综述。我们将地理分布、盐度耐受性、系统发育关系以及生理和行为机制方面的现有知识联系起来,以生成对淡水龟对不断变化的咸水环境的反应的基本理解。我们还回顾了淡水龟盐度耐受性的潜在起源。最后,我们整合了 2100 年海平面上升 (SLR) 预测、物种分布图、收集的关于使用咸水的文献以及系统发育关系,以预测全球范围内淡水龟面临的预计 SLR。从我们对已发表文献和可用数据的综合分析中,我们为沿海淡水龟的空间和系统发育保护制定了优先事项。根据我们的文献综述,11 个淡水龟科中有 10 个科的 70 个物种(约 30%的沿海淡水龟物种)已在咸水生态系统中报道。大多数轶事记录、观察和描述并不意味着淡水龟具有长期的耐盐性。相反,实验表明,一些物种在生理、行为和生活史特征方面表现出潜在的适应和可塑性,使它们能够忍受不同的时期(例如数天或数月)和不同水平的海水暴露。专门栖息在咸水栖息地的物种由于其沿海分布的独特性和对狭窄盐度范围的适应性,可能容易受到 SLR 的影响。然而,大多数物种都没有在咸水栖息地中记录下来,但也可能对预测的 SLR 非常敏感。我们的分析表明,到 2100 年,我们研究中评估的大约 90%的沿海淡水龟物种将受到全球平均海平面上升 1 米的影响。风险最大的是在新几内亚、东南亚、澳大利亚以及北美和南美的淡水龟,它们可能会失去超过 10%的现有地理范围。此外,Chelidae、Emydidae 和 Trionychidae 科的龟种可能会在其现有地理范围内经历最大程度的预测 SLR 暴露。更好地了解对 SLR 的生存、生长、繁殖和种群水平的反应将提高对淡水龟的区域特定种群生存力预测,这些淡水龟越来越容易受到 SLR 的影响。整合系统发育、生理和空间框架来评估预测的 SLR 的影响可能会有助于确定需要保护优先事项的脆弱物种、 guild 和地理区域。我们的结论是,淡水龟对咸水和海水环境的利用为我们提供了有关延长其生存时间、塑造其独特的沿海分布的进化过程的线索,并且可能有助于预测它们对不断变化的世界的反应。