Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Estación Biológica de Doñana, CSIC, Sevilla, Spain.
Laboratorio de Ecofisiología and Museo de Zoología (QCAZ), Escuela de Ciencias Biológicas, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador.
J Anim Ecol. 2021 Aug;90(8):1985-1995. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13516. Epub 2021 May 31.
Climate change may have dramatic consequences for communities through both direct effects of peak temperatures upon individual species and through interspecific mismatches in thermal sensitivities of interacting organisms which mediate changes in interspecific interactions (i.e. predation). Despite this, there is a paucity of information on the patterns of spatial physiological sensitivity of interacting species (at both landscape and local scales) which could ultimately influence geographical variation in the effects of climate change on community processes. In order to assess where these impacts may occur, we first need to evaluate the spatial heterogeneity in the degree of mismatch in thermal tolerances between interacting organisms. We quantify the magnitude of interspecific mismatch in maximum (CT ) and minimum (CT ) thermal tolerances among a predator-prey system of dragonfly and anuran larvae in tropical montane (242-3,631 m) and habitat (ponds and streams) gradients. To compare thermal mismatches between predator and prey, we coined the parameters maximum and minimum predatory tolerance margins (PTM and PTM ), or difference in CT and CT of interacting organisms sampled across elevational and habitat gradients. Our analyses revealed that: (a) predators exhibit higher heat tolerances than prey (~4°C), a trend which remained stable across habitats and elevations. In contrast, we found no differences in minimum thermal tolerances between these groups. (b) Maximum and minimum thermal tolerances of both predators and prey decreased with elevation, but only maximum thermal tolerance varied across habitats, with pond species exhibiting higher heat tolerance than stream species. (c) Pond-dwelling organisms from low elevations (0-1,500 m a.s.l.) may be more susceptible to direct effects of warming than their highland counterparts because their maximum thermal tolerances are only slightly higher than their exposed maximum environmental temperatures. The greater relative thermal tolerance of dragonfly naiad predators may further increase the vulnerability of lowland tadpoles to warming due to potentially enhanced indirect effects of higher predation rates by more heat-tolerant dragonfly predators. However, further experimental work is required to establish the individual and population-level consequences of this thermal tolerance mismatch upon biotic interactions such as predator-prey. .
气候变化可能通过峰值温度对单个物种的直接影响,以及通过相互作用的生物热敏感性的种间不匹配,对社区产生巨大影响,这种不匹配会影响种间相互作用(即捕食)的变化。尽管如此,关于相互作用物种的空间生理敏感性模式(在景观和局部尺度上)的信息仍然很少,而这些信息最终可能会影响气候变化对群落过程的地理变化。为了评估这些影响可能发生的地方,我们首先需要评估相互作用生物之间热容忍度不匹配程度的空间异质性。我们量化了热带山地(242-3631 米)和生境(池塘和溪流)梯度中蜻蜓和两栖类幼虫捕食者-猎物系统中最大(CT)和最小(CT)热容忍度的种间不匹配程度。为了比较捕食者和猎物之间的热不匹配,我们提出了最大和最小捕食者容忍度边缘(PTM 和 PTM)或相互作用生物的 CT 和 CT 之间的差异参数,这些参数是在海拔和生境梯度上取样的。我们的分析表明:(a)捕食者比猎物具有更高的耐热性(~4°C),这种趋势在栖息地和海拔上都保持稳定。相比之下,我们发现这些组之间的最小热容忍度没有差异。(b)捕食者和猎物的最大和最小热容忍度都随海拔升高而降低,但只有最大热容忍度随栖息地而变化,池塘物种的耐热性高于溪流物种。(c)低海拔(0-1500 米)的池塘生物可能比高海拔的生物更容易受到变暖的直接影响,因为它们的最大热容忍度仅略高于其暴露的最大环境温度。蜻蜓若虫捕食者的相对较大的热容忍度可能会进一步增加低地蝌蚪对变暖的脆弱性,因为耐热性更高的蜻蜓捕食者可能会导致捕食率升高,从而产生间接影响。然而,需要进一步的实验工作来确定这种热容忍度不匹配对生物相互作用(如捕食者-猎物)的个体和种群水平的影响。