Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Harvard University Herbaria, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Harvard University Herbaria, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Nov 19;374(1763):20170394. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0394.
Phenology is a key biological trait that can determine an organism's survival and provides one of the clearest indicators of the effects of recent climatic change. Long time-series observations of plant phenology collected at continental scales could clarify latitudinal and regional patterns of plant responses and illuminate drivers of that variation, but few such datasets exist. Here, we use the web tool to crowdsource phenological data from over 7000 herbarium specimens representing 30 diverse flowering plant species distributed across the eastern United States. Our results, spanning 120 years and generated from over 2000 crowdsourcers, illustrate numerous aspects of continental-scale plant reproductive phenology. First, they support prior studies that found plant reproductive phenology significantly advances in response to warming, especially for early-flowering species. Second, they reveal that fruiting in populations from warmer, lower latitudes is significantly more phenologically sensitive to temperature than that for populations from colder, higher-latitude regions. Last, we found that variation in phenological sensitivities to climate within species between regions was of similar magnitude to variation between species. Overall, our results suggest that phenological responses to anthropogenic climate change will be heterogeneous within communities and across regions, with large amounts of regional variability driven by local adaptation, phenotypic plasticity and differences in species assemblages. As millions of imaged herbarium specimens become available online, they will play an increasingly critical role in revealing large-scale patterns within assemblages and across continents that ultimately can improve forecasts of the impacts of climatic change on the structure and function of ecosystems.This article is part of the theme issue 'Biological collections for understanding biodiversity in the Anthropocene'.
物候学是一种关键的生物特征,它可以决定生物的生存,并提供了最近气候变化影响的最明显指标之一。在大陆尺度上对植物物候进行长时间序列观测,可以阐明植物对气候变化响应的纬度和区域模式,并阐明这种变化的驱动因素,但这样的数据集很少。在这里,我们使用网络工具 从代表美国东部 30 种不同开花植物物种的 7000 多个标本中众包物候数据。我们的结果跨越了 120 年,由 2000 多名众包人员生成,说明了大陆尺度植物生殖物候的许多方面。首先,它们支持了先前的研究,即发现植物生殖物候显著随着变暖而提前,特别是对于早开花物种。其次,它们表明,来自温暖低纬度地区的种群的果实物候对温度的敏感性明显高于来自寒冷高纬度地区的种群。最后,我们发现,同一物种在不同地区的物候对气候的敏感性差异与不同物种之间的差异相当。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,植物对人为气候变化的物候响应在群落内部和跨地区之间将是不均匀的,大量的区域变异性是由局部适应、表型可塑性和物种组合的差异驱动的。随着数以百万计的成像标本在网上变得可用,它们将在揭示种内和跨大陆的大规模模式方面发挥越来越重要的作用,最终可以提高对气候变化对生态系统结构和功能影响的预测。本文是主题为“人类世的生物多样性:生物标本的作用”特刊的一部分。