Biology Department, Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington, United States of America.
Oregon State Arthropod Collection, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Sep 12;13(9):e0202850. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202850. eCollection 2018.
Climate change has caused shifts in the phenology and distributions of many species but comparing responses across species is challenged by inconsistencies in the methodology and taxonomic and temporal scope of individual studies. Natural history collections offer a rich source of data for examining phenological shifts for a large number of species. We paired specimen records from Pacific Northwest insect collections to climate data to analyze the responses of 215 moth species to interannual climate variation over a period of 119 years (1895-2013) during which average annual temperatures have increased in the region. We quantified the effects of late winter/early spring temperatures, averaged annually across the region, on dates of occurrence of adults, taking into account the effects of elevation, latitude, and longitude. We assessed whether species-specific phenological responses varied with adult flight season and larval diet breadth. Collection dates were significantly earlier in warmer years for 36.3% of moth species, and later for 3.7%. Species exhibited an average phenological advance of 1.9 days/°C, but species-specific shifts ranged from an advance of 10.3 days/°C to a delay of 10.6 days/°C. More spring-flying species shifted their phenology than summer- or fall-flying species. These responses did not vary among groups defined by larval diet breadth. The highly variable phenological responses to climate change in Pacific Northwest moths agree with other studies on Lepidoptera and suggest that it will remain difficult to accurately forecast which species and ecological interactions are most likely to be affected by climate change. Our results also underscore the value of natural history collections as windows into long-term ecological trends.
气候变化导致许多物种的物候和分布发生了变化,但由于个体研究的方法、分类和时间范围不一致,使得比较物种的反应变得具有挑战性。自然历史收藏为研究大量物种的物候变化提供了丰富的数据来源。我们将太平洋西北地区昆虫收藏的标本记录与气候数据配对,以分析 215 种蛾类物种在过去 119 年(1895-2013 年)期间对年际气候变化的反应,在此期间,该地区的年平均气温有所上升。我们量化了区域内平均每年的晚冬/早春温度对成虫出现日期的影响,同时考虑了海拔、纬度和经度的影响。我们评估了特定物种的物候反应是否随成虫飞行季节和幼虫食性宽度而变化。在变暖的年份,36.3%的蛾类物种的采集日期提前,3.7%的物种的采集日期推迟。物种表现出平均 1.9 天/°C的物候提前,但特定物种的变化范围从提前 10.3 天/°C到延迟 10.6 天/°C。更多在春季飞行的物种比在夏季或秋季飞行的物种更早地改变了它们的物候。这些反应在幼虫食性宽度定义的群体之间没有差异。在太平洋西北地区蛾类中,气候变化引起的高度可变的物候反应与其他鳞翅目昆虫的研究结果一致,表明要准确预测哪些物种和生态相互作用最有可能受到气候变化的影响仍然具有挑战性。我们的研究结果还强调了自然历史收藏作为长期生态趋势窗口的价值。