Department of Biology and IGDP in Ecology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, 16802, USA.
Ecology. 2021 Jan;102(1):e03219. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3219. Epub 2020 Nov 20.
Numerous studies have documented changes in the seasonal timing of organisms' growth and reproduction in response to climate warming. These changes correlate with documented changes in species' abundance, but mechanisms linking these trends remain elusive. We investigated the joint demographic effects of advanced reproductive phenology and warming on a globally invasive plant (Carduus nutans) in a field experiment, documenting a substantial shift toward completion of the life cycle at younger ages. Demographic modeling projected 71% of warmed individuals flower as annuals, compared to 61% under current conditions. As this species only reproduces once, this represents a major acceleration of the life cycle. We project a 15% increase in this invader's population growth rate. We show that rising temperatures accelerate this invasive species' population growth by increasing the average size of reproducing individuals; increasing the proportion of individuals that survive to reproduce; and increasing the fraction that reproduce as annuals. Major increases in population growth in this, and potentially many other, invasive species will threaten food security and require careful planning to avoid significant environmental and economic impacts.
大量研究记录了生物生长和繁殖的季节性时间的变化,以响应气候变暖。这些变化与物种丰度的记录变化相关,但将这些趋势联系起来的机制仍不清楚。我们在野外实验中调查了先进的繁殖物候和变暖对全球入侵植物(蓟)的联合人口效应,记录了生命周期在更年轻时完成的实质性转变。人口统计模型预测,在变暖的情况下,71%的个体将作为一年生植物开花,而在当前条件下,这一比例为 61%。由于该物种仅繁殖一次,这代表了生命周期的重大加速。我们预计这种入侵物种的种群增长率将增加 15%。我们表明,由于个体繁殖的平均大小增加、存活到繁殖的个体比例增加以及一年生个体繁殖的比例增加,气温升高会加速这种入侵物种的种群增长。在这种情况下,以及在其他可能的许多入侵物种中,种群增长的大幅增加将威胁到粮食安全,并需要仔细规划以避免对环境和经济产生重大影响。