Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization National Research Collections Australia, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia;
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization National Research Collections Australia, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019 Jul 30;116(31):15580-15589. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1902046116. Epub 2019 Jul 15.
An important new hypothesis in landscape ecology is that extreme, decade-scale megadroughts can be potent drivers of rapid, macroscale ecosystem degradation and collapse. If true, an increase in such events under climate change could have devastating consequences for global biodiversity. However, because few megadroughts have occurred in the modern ecological era, the taxonomic breadth, trophic depth, and geographic pattern of these impacts remain unknown. Here we use ecohistorical techniques to quantify the impact of a record, pancontinental megadrought period (1891 to 1903 CE) on the Australian biota. We show that during this event mortality and severe stress was recorded in >45 bird, mammal, fish, reptile, and plant families in arid, semiarid, dry temperate, and Mediterranean ecosystems over at least 2.8 million km (36%) of the Australian continent. Trophic analysis reveals a bottom-up pattern of mortality concentrated in primary producer, herbivore, and omnivore guilds. Spatial and temporal reconstruction of premortality rainfall shows that mass mortality and synchronous ecosystem-wide collapse emerged in multiple geographic hotspots after 2 to 4 y of severe (>40%) and intensifying rainfall deficits. However, the presence of hyperabundant herbivores significantly increased the sensitivity of ecosystems to overgrazing-induced meltdown and permanent ecosystem change. The unprecedented taxonomic breadth and spatial scale of these impacts demonstrate that continental-scale megadroughts pose a major future threat to global biodiversity, especially in ecosystems affected by intensive agricultural use, trophic simplification, and invasive species.
景观生态学中有一个重要的新假设,即极端的、十年尺度的特大干旱可以成为快速、大规模生态系统退化和崩溃的有力驱动因素。如果这是真的,气候变化下此类事件的增加可能会对全球生物多样性造成毁灭性的后果。然而,由于现代生态时代很少发生特大干旱,这些影响的分类广度、营养深度和地理模式仍然未知。在这里,我们使用生态历史技术来量化一段记录中的泛大陆特大干旱期(公元 1891 年至 1903 年)对澳大利亚生物群的影响。我们表明,在这一事件中,至少有 280 万平方千米(36%)的澳大利亚大陆的干旱、半干旱、干燥温带和地中海生态系统中,有超过 45 个鸟类、哺乳动物、鱼类、爬行动物和植物科记录到了死亡率和严重压力。营养分析显示,死亡集中在初级生产者、食草动物和杂食动物群体中,呈自上而下的模式。对生前降雨的时空重建表明,大量死亡和同步的全生态系统崩溃出现在多个地理热点之后,这些热点经历了 2 到 4 年的严重(>40%)和加剧的降雨亏缺。然而,大量食草动物的存在显著增加了生态系统对过度放牧引发的崩溃和永久生态系统变化的敏感性。这些影响在分类学上的空前广度和空间尺度表明,大陆规模的特大干旱对全球生物多样性构成了重大的未来威胁,特别是在受密集农业利用、营养简化和入侵物种影响的生态系统中。