Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Monterey, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jul 24;14(7):e0217711. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0217711. eCollection 2019.
Major ecological realignments are already occurring in response to climate change. To be successful, conservation strategies now need to account for geographical patterns in traits sensitive to climate change, as well as climate threats to species-level diversity. As part of an effort to provide such information, we conducted a climate vulnerability assessment that included all anadromous Pacific salmon and steelhead (Oncorhynchus spp.) population units listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Using an expert-based scoring system, we ranked 20 attributes for the 28 listed units and 5 additional units. Attributes captured biological sensitivity, or the strength of linkages between each listing unit and the present climate; climate exposure, or the magnitude of projected change in local environmental conditions; and adaptive capacity, or the ability to modify phenotypes to cope with new climatic conditions. Each listing unit was then assigned one of four vulnerability categories. Units ranked most vulnerable overall were Chinook (O. tshawytscha) in the California Central Valley, coho (O. kisutch) in California and southern Oregon, sockeye (O. nerka) in the Snake River Basin, and spring-run Chinook in the interior Columbia and Willamette River Basins. We identified units with similar vulnerability profiles using a hierarchical cluster analysis. Life history characteristics, especially freshwater and estuary residence times, interplayed with gradations in exposure from south to north and from coastal to interior regions to generate landscape-level patterns within each species. Nearly all listing units faced high exposures to projected increases in stream temperature, sea surface temperature, and ocean acidification, but other aspects of exposure peaked in particular regions. Anthropogenic factors, especially migration barriers, habitat degradation, and hatchery influence, have reduced the adaptive capacity of most steelhead and salmon populations. Enhancing adaptive capacity is essential to mitigate for the increasing threat of climate change. Collectively, these results provide a framework to support recovery planning that considers climate impacts on the majority of West Coast anadromous salmonids.
主要的生态变化已经在响应气候变化。为了取得成功,保护策略现在需要考虑对物种水平多样性的气候威胁以及对敏感的气候变化的地理模式。作为提供此类信息的一部分,我们进行了一项气候脆弱性评估,其中包括根据美国濒危物种法案列出的所有溯河洄游太平洋鲑鱼和虹鳟(Oncorhynchus spp.)种群单位。我们使用基于专家的评分系统,对列出的 28 个单位和 5 个附加单位的 20 个属性进行了排名。属性捕捉了生物敏感性,即每个上市单位与当前气候之间联系的强弱;气候暴露度,即当地环境条件预期变化的幅度;以及适应能力,即改变表型以应对新的气候条件的能力。然后,每个上市单位被分配到四个脆弱性类别之一。总体上被评为最脆弱的单位是加利福尼亚中央山谷的奇努克鲑鱼(O. tshawytscha)、加利福尼亚和南俄勒冈的银鲑(O. kisutch)、蛇河流域的红大麻哈鱼(O. nerka)以及内陆哥伦比亚和威拉米特河流域的春季洄游奇努克鲑鱼。我们使用层次聚类分析确定了具有相似脆弱性特征的单位。生活史特征,特别是淡水和河口停留时间,与从南到北以及从沿海到内陆地区的暴露程度相互作用,在每个物种中产生了景观水平的模式。几乎所有上市单位都面临着预计增加的溪流温度、海面温度和海洋酸化的高暴露,但是其他暴露方面在特定地区达到了峰值。人为因素,特别是迁徙障碍、栖息地退化和孵化场影响,降低了大多数虹鳟和鲑鱼种群的适应能力。增强适应能力对于减轻气候变化日益增加的威胁至关重要。总的来说,这些结果提供了一个框架,以支持考虑气候变化对西海岸溯河洄游鲑鱼的影响的恢复计划。