School of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Arizona State University at the West Campus, Glendale, AZ, United States of America.
Department of Biology, Lasry Center for Bioscience, Worcester, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Sep 6;14(9):e0220153. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220153. eCollection 2019.
While shifts in organismal biology stemming from climate change are receiving increased attention, we know relatively little about how organisms respond to other forms of anthropogenic disturbance. The urban heat island (UHI) effect describes the capture of heat by built structures (e.g. asphalt), resulting in elevated urban temperatures. The UHI is a well-studied phenomenon, but only a handful of studies have investigated trait-based shifts resulting from the UHI, and even fewer have attempted to quantify the magnitude of the UHI experienced at the microclimate scale. Here, using a common urban exploiter, the Western black widow spider (Latrodectus hesperus), we show that the UHI experienced by spiders in July in their urban Phoenix, AZ refuges is 6°C hotter (33°C) than conditions in the refuges of spiders from Sonoran Desert habitat outside of Phoenix's development (27°C). We then use this field microclimate UHI estimate to compare the development speed, mass gain and mortality of replicate siblings from 36 urban lineages reared at 'urban' and 'desert' temperatures. We show that extreme heat is slowing the growth of spiderlings and increasing mortality. In contrast, we show that development of male spiders to their penultimate moult is accelerated by 2 weeks. Lastly, in terms of behavioral shifts, UHI temperatures caused late-stage juvenile male spiders to heighten their foraging voracity and late-stage juvenile female spiders to curtail their web-building behavior. Trait-based approaches like the one presented herein help us better understand the mechanisms that lead to the explosive population growth of urban (sometimes invasive) species, possibly at the expense of urban biodiversity. Studies of organismal responses to the present day UHI can be used as informative surrogates that help us grasp the impact that projected climate change will have on biodiversity.
虽然气候变化引起的生物体制变化受到了越来越多的关注,但我们对生物如何应对其他形式的人为干扰知之甚少。城市热岛(UHI)效应描述了建筑物(如沥青)吸收热量,导致城市温度升高。城市热岛是一个研究得很好的现象,但只有少数研究调查了由于城市热岛而导致的基于特征的变化,更少的研究试图量化微气候尺度上经历的城市热岛的幅度。在这里,我们使用一种常见的城市掠食者,西部黑寡妇蜘蛛(Latrodectus hesperus),表明蜘蛛在 7 月在其城市菲尼克斯(AZ)避难所经历的 UHI 比来自凤凰城以外的索诺兰沙漠栖息地的蜘蛛在避难所中经历的温度高 6°C(33°C)。然后,我们使用这个现场微气候 UHI 估计来比较在“城市”和“沙漠”温度下饲养的 36 个城市谱系的重复兄弟姐妹的发育速度、体重增加和死亡率。我们发现极端高温正在减缓幼蛛的生长并增加死亡率。相比之下,我们发现雄性蜘蛛的发育到最后一次蜕皮提前了 2 周。最后,在行为变化方面,UHI 温度导致晚期雄性幼蛛增加觅食的贪婪性,晚期雌性幼蛛减少结网行为。像本文中提出的基于特征的方法可以帮助我们更好地理解导致城市(有时是入侵)物种爆炸性种群增长的机制,这可能是以城市生物多样性为代价的。对生物体对当今 UHI 的反应的研究可以作为信息替代物,帮助我们理解预计的气候变化对生物多样性的影响。