Walker William H, Meléndez-Fernández Olga Hecmarie, Nelson Randy J, Reiter Russel J
Department of Neuroscience West Virginia University Morgantown WV USA.
Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute West Virginia University Morgantown WV USA.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Aug 16;9(17):10044-10054. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5537. eCollection 2019 Sep.
The Earth's surface temperature is rising, and precipitation patterns throughout the Earth are changing; the source of these shifts is likely anthropogenic in nature. Alterations in temperature and precipitation have obvious direct and indirect effects on both plants and animals. Notably, changes in temperature and precipitation alone can have both advantageous and detrimental consequences depending on the species. Typically, production of offspring is timed to coincide with optimal food availability; thus, individuals of many species display annual rhythms of reproductive function. Because it requires substantial time to establish or re-establish reproductive function, individuals cannot depend on the arrival of seasonal food availability to begin breeding; thus, mechanisms have evolved in many plants and animals to monitor and respond to day length in order to anticipate seasonal changes in the environment. Over evolutionary time, there has been precise fine-tuning of critical photoperiod and onset/offset of seasonal adaptations. Climate change has provoked changes in the availability of insects and plants which shifts the timing of optimal reproduction. However, adaptations to the stable photoperiod may be insufficiently plastic to allow a shift in the seasonal timing of bird and mammal breeding. Coupled with the effects of light pollution which prevents these species from determining day length, climate change presents extreme evolutionary pressure that can result in severe deleterious consequences for individual species reproduction and survival. This review describes the effects of climate change on plants and animals, defines photoperiod and the physiological events it regulates, and addresses the consequences of global climate change and a stable photoperiod.
地球表面温度正在上升,全球降水模式也在发生变化;这些变化的根源很可能是人为因素。温度和降水的改变对动植物有着明显的直接和间接影响。值得注意的是,仅温度和降水的变化对不同物种而言,既可能产生有利影响,也可能带来有害后果。通常情况下,后代的繁殖时间会与最佳食物供应期相吻合;因此,许多物种的个体都表现出年度生殖功能节律。由于建立或重新建立生殖功能需要大量时间,个体无法依赖季节性食物供应的到来才开始繁殖;于是,许多动植物进化出了监测和响应日照长度的机制,以便预测环境中的季节性变化。在进化过程中,关键光周期以及季节性适应的开始/结束都经过了精确的微调。气候变化引发了昆虫和植物可利用性的变化,从而改变了最佳繁殖时间。然而,对稳定光周期的适应可能缺乏足够的可塑性,无法使鸟类和哺乳动物的繁殖季节时间发生改变。再加上光污染的影响,使这些物种无法确定日照长度,气候变化带来了巨大的进化压力,可能对单个物种的繁殖和生存造成严重的有害后果。本综述描述了气候变化对动植物的影响,定义了光周期及其调节的生理事件,并探讨了全球气候变化和稳定光周期的后果。