Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Berlin, Germany.
Berlin-Brandenburg Institute of Advanced Biodiversity Research - BBIB, Berlin, Germany.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Dec;26(12):6729-6741. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15337. Epub 2020 Sep 25.
Despite growing pressure on biodiversity deriving from increasing anthropogenic disturbances, some species successfully persist in altered ecosystems. However, these species' characteristics and thresholds, as well as the environmental frame behind that process are usually unknown. We collected data on body size, fluctuating asymmetry (FA), as well as nitrogen stable isotopes (δ N) from museum specimens of the European Common Frog, Rana temporaria, all originating from the Berlin-Brandenburg area, Germany, in order to test: (a) if specimens have changed over the last 150 years (1868-2018); and (b) if changes could be attributed to increasing urbanization and agricultural intensity. We detected that after the Second World War, frogs were larger than in pre-war Berlin. In rural Brandenburg, we observed no such size change. FA analysis revealed a similar tendency with lower levels in Berlin after the war and higher levels in Brandenburg. Enrichment of δ N decreased over time in both regions but was generally higher and less variable in sites with agricultural land use. Frogs thus seem to encounter favorable habitat conditions after pollution in postwar Berlin improved, but no such tendencies were observable in the predominantly agricultural landscape of Brandenburg. Urbanization, characterized by the proportion of built-up area, was not the main associated factor for the observed trait changes. However, we detected a relationship with the amount of urban greenspace. Our study exemplifies that increasing urbanization must not necessarily worsen conditions for species living in urban habitats. The Berlin example demonstrates that public parks and other urban greenspaces have the potential to serve as suitable refuges for some species. These findings underline the urgency of establishing, maintaining, and connecting such habitats, and generally consider their importance for future urban planning.
尽管生物多样性受到日益增加的人为干扰的压力越来越大,但有些物种仍能在改变的生态系统中成功生存。然而,这些物种的特征和阈值,以及背后的环境框架通常是未知的。我们从德国柏林-勃兰登堡地区的博物馆标本中收集了欧洲普通蛙(Rana temporaria)的体型大小、波动不对称(FA)和氮稳定同位素(δN)的数据,以测试:(a)标本是否在过去 150 年(1868-2018 年)发生了变化;以及(b)变化是否可以归因于城市化和农业强度的增加。我们发现,第二次世界大战后,青蛙的体型比战前的柏林更大。在农村的勃兰登堡,我们没有观察到这种体型变化。FA 分析显示出类似的趋势,战后柏林的 FA 值较低,而勃兰登堡的 FA 值较高。两个地区的δN 丰度都随时间推移而降低,但在农业用地的地点,丰度更高,变异性更小。因此,在战后柏林的污染得到改善后,青蛙似乎遇到了更有利的栖息地条件,但在以农业为主的勃兰登堡景观中,没有观察到这种趋势。城市化,以建成区比例为特征,并不是观察到的特征变化的主要相关因素。然而,我们检测到与城市绿地面积有关。我们的研究表明,城市化的增加不一定会恶化生活在城市栖息地的物种的条件。柏林的例子表明,公共公园和其他城市绿地有潜力成为一些物种的适宜避难所。这些发现强调了建立、维护和连接这些栖息地的紧迫性,并普遍考虑了它们对未来城市规划的重要性。