Department of Geography, Birkbeck University of London, London, UK.
School for Resource and Environmental Studies, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Mar;26(3):1155-1169. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14862. Epub 2019 Nov 2.
Anthropogenic activities have led to a global decline in biodiversity, and monitoring studies indicate that both insect communities and wetland ecosystems are particularly affected. However, there is a need for long-term data (over centennial or millennial timescales) to better understand natural community dynamics and the processes that govern the observed trends. Chironomids (Insecta: Diptera: Chironomidae) are often the most abundant insects in lake ecosystems, sensitive to environmental change, and, because their larval exoskeleton head capsules preserve well in lake sediments, they provide a unique record of insect community dynamics through time. Here, we provide the results of a metadata analysis of chironomid diversity across a range of spatial and temporal scales. First, we analyse spatial trends in chironomid diversity using Northern Hemispheric data sets overall consisting of 837 lakes. Our results indicate that in most of our data sets, summer temperature (T ) is strongly associated with spatial trends in modern-day chironomid diversity. We observe a strong increase in chironomid alpha diversity with increasing T in regions with present-day T between 2.5 and 14°C. In some areas with T > 14°C, chironomid diversity stabilizes or declines. Second, we demonstrate that the direction and amplitude of change in alpha diversity in a compilation of subfossil chironomid records spanning the last glacial-interglacial transition (~15,000-11,000 years ago) are similar to those observed in our modern data. A compilation of Holocene records shows that during phases when the amplitude of temperature change was small, site-specific factors had a greater influence on the chironomid fauna obscuring the chironomid diversity-temperature relationship. Our results imply expected overall chironomid diversity increases in colder regions such as the Arctic under sustained global warming, but with complex and not necessarily predictable responses for individual sites.
人为活动导致生物多样性在全球范围内减少,监测研究表明,昆虫群落和湿地生态系统尤其受到影响。然而,需要长期数据(超过百年或千年的时间尺度)来更好地了解自然群落动态和控制观察到的趋势的过程。摇蚊(昆虫纲:双翅目:摇蚊科)通常是湖泊生态系统中最丰富的昆虫,对环境变化敏感,并且由于它们的幼虫外骨骼头壳在湖泊沉积物中保存完好,因此它们为昆虫群落动态提供了独特的时间记录。在这里,我们提供了跨空间和时间尺度的摇蚊多样性元数据分析的结果。首先,我们使用包括 837 个湖泊在内的北半球数据集分析了摇蚊多样性的空间趋势。我们的结果表明,在我们的大多数数据集,夏季温度(T)与现代摇蚊多样性的空间趋势密切相关。我们观察到,在当今 T 介于 2.5 和 14°C 之间的地区,随着 T 的增加,摇蚊α多样性呈强劲增加趋势。在一些 T>14°C 的地区,摇蚊多样性稳定或下降。其次,我们证明,在涵盖最后一次冰期-间冰期过渡(约 15000-11000 年前)的亚化石摇蚊记录汇编中,α多样性变化的方向和幅度与我们在现代数据中观察到的相似。全新世记录的汇编表明,在温度变化幅度较小的阶段,特定地点的因素对摇蚊动物群的影响更大,掩盖了摇蚊多样性与温度的关系。我们的结果表明,在持续的全球变暖下,预计北极等寒冷地区的摇蚊多样性总体增加,但个别地点的反应复杂且不一定可预测。