Instituto Pirenaico de Ecología (IPE-CSIC), Zaragoza, Spain.
IRSTEA, UR MALY, Centre de Lyon-Villeurbanne, Villeurbanne, France.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 May;25(5):1612-1628. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14581. Epub 2019 Mar 3.
Understanding and predicting how biological communities respond to climate change is critical for assessing biodiversity vulnerability and guiding conservation efforts. Glacier- and snow-fed rivers are one of the most sensitive ecosystems to climate change, and can provide early warning of wider-scale changes. These rivers are frequently used for hydropower production but there is minimal understanding of how biological communities are influenced by climate change in a context of flow regulation. This study sheds light on this issue by disentangling structural (water temperature preference, taxonomic composition, alpha, beta and gamma diversities) and functional (functional traits, diversity, richness, evenness, dispersion and redundancy) effects of climate change in interaction with flow regulation in the Alps. For this, we compared environmental and aquatic invertebrate data collected in the 1970s and 2010s in regulated and unregulated alpine catchments. We hypothesized a replacement of cold-adapted species by warming-tolerant ones, high temporal and spatial turnover in taxa and trait composition, along with reduced taxonomic and functional diversities in consequence of climate change. We expected communities in regulated rivers to respond more drastically due to additive or synergistic effects between flow regulation and climate change. We found divergent structural but convergent functional responses between free-flowing and regulated catchments. Although cold-adapted taxa decreased in both of them, greater colonization and spread of thermophilic species was found in the free-flowing one, resulting in higher spatial and temporal turnover. Since the 1970s, taxonomic diversity increased in the free flowing but decreased in the regulated catchment due to biotic homogenization. Colonization by taxa with new functional strategies (i.e. multivoltine taxa with small body size, resistance forms, aerial dispersion and reproduction by clutches) increased functional diversity but decreased functional redundancy through time. These functional changes could jeopardize the ability of aquatic communities facing intensification of ongoing climate change or new anthropogenic disturbances.
了解和预测生物群落如何应对气候变化对于评估生物多样性的脆弱性和指导保护工作至关重要。冰川和冰雪融水河是对气候变化最敏感的生态系统之一,可以为更广泛范围的变化提供早期预警。这些河流经常用于水力发电,但对于在流量调节的背景下,气候变化如何影响生物群落,人们的了解甚少。本研究通过解开阿尔卑斯山流量调节与气候变化相互作用下结构(水温偏好、分类组成、α、β和γ多样性)和功能(功能特征、多样性、丰富度、均匀度、分散度和冗余度)效应,阐明了这一问题。为此,我们比较了 20 世纪 70 年代和 2010 年代在调节和未调节高山集水区收集的环境和水生无脊椎动物数据。我们假设,随着气候变化的发生,冷水适应物种将被耐热物种所取代,在时间和空间上,分类组成和特征组成发生较高的更替,同时由于气候变化,分类和功能多样性降低。我们预计,由于流量调节和气候变化之间的附加或协同效应,调节河流中的群落将做出更剧烈的反应。我们发现,自由流动和调节集水区之间存在结构上的趋同但功能上的趋异反应。尽管冷水适应类群在两者中都减少了,但在自由流动的集水区中发现了更多的嗜热物种的定殖和扩散,导致更高的时空更替。自 20 世纪 70 年代以来,由于生物同质化,自由流动的集水区中的分类多样性增加,而调节集水区中的分类多样性减少。具有新功能策略的类群(即多化性、小体型、抗性形式、空中分散和卵群繁殖)的定殖增加了功能多样性,但随着时间的推移,功能冗余度降低。这些功能变化可能会危及面临正在加剧的气候变化或新的人为干扰的水生群落的适应能力。