Biological and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Natural Sciences, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK.
Universidad Nacional del Comahue, INIBIOMA-CONICET, Bariloche, Argentina.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 May;25(5):1549-1560. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14597. Epub 2019 Mar 12.
According to broad-scale application of biogeographical theory, widespread retractions of species' rear edges should be seen in response to ongoing climate change. This prediction rests on the assumption that rear edge populations are "marginal" since they occur at the limit of the species' ecological tolerance and are expected to decline in performance as climate warming pushes them to extirpation. However, conflicts between observations and predictions are increasingly accumulating and little progress has been made in explaining this disparity. We argue that a revision of the concept of marginality is necessary, together with explicit testing of population decline, which is increasingly possible as data availability improves. Such action should be based on taking the population perspective across a species' rear edge, encompassing the ecological, geographical and genetic dimensions of marginality. Refining our understanding of rear edge populations is essential to advance our ability to monitor, predict and plan for the impacts of environmental change on species range dynamics.
根据生物地理学理论的广泛应用,应该会看到物种后缘的广泛退缩,以应对正在发生的气候变化。这一预测基于这样一种假设,即后缘种群是“边缘的”,因为它们处于物种生态耐受极限,随着气候变暖将它们推向灭绝,预计它们的表现会下降。然而,观察结果和预测之间的冲突越来越多,而且在解释这种差异方面几乎没有取得进展。我们认为,有必要对边缘性的概念进行修正,并明确测试种群的减少,随着数据可用性的提高,这种测试越来越有可能。这种行动应该基于在物种后缘采取种群观点,包括边缘性的生态、地理和遗传维度。深化我们对后缘种群的理解对于提高我们监测、预测和规划环境变化对物种范围动态影响的能力至关重要。