Institute of Wildlife Biology and Game Management, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria.
Berchtesgaden National Park, Berchtesgaden, Germany.
Glob Chang Biol. 2021 Aug;27(16):3741-3752. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15711. Epub 2021 Jun 3.
Climate change is known to affect key life-history traits, such as body mass, reproduction, and survival in many species. Animal populations inhabiting mountain habitats are adapted to extreme seasonal environmental conditions but are also expected to be especially vulnerable to climate change. Studies on mountain ungulates typically focus on populations or sections of populations living above the tree line, whereas populations inhabiting forested habitats are largely understudied. Here, we investigate whether forested areas can mitigate the impact of climatic change on life-history traits by evaluating the interactive effects of temperature and habitat characteristics on body mass variation in the Alpine chamois Rupicapra rupicapra rupicapra. We examined data of 20,573 yearling chamois collected from 1993 to 2019 in 28 mountain ranges in the Austrian Eastern Alps, characterized by different proportion of forest cover. Our results show that the temporal decline of chamois body mass is less pronounced in areas with greater proportion of forest cover. For chamois living in forest habitats only, no significant temporal change in body mass was detected. Variation in body mass was affected by the interaction between density and snow cover, as well as by the interaction between spring temperatures and forest cover, supporting the role of forests as thermal buffer against the effects of increasing temperatures on life-history traits in a mountain ungulate. In turn, this study suggests a buffering effect of forests against climate change impacts. Assessments of the consequences of climate change on the life-history traits and population dynamics of mountain-dwelling species should thus consider the plasticity of the species with respect to the use and availability of different habitat types.
气候变化已知会影响许多物种的关键生活史特征,如体重、繁殖和生存。栖息在山区的动物种群适应极端的季节性环境条件,但预计它们特别容易受到气候变化的影响。关于山地有蹄类动物的研究通常集中在生活在树线以上的种群或种群部分,而栖息在森林栖息地的种群则在很大程度上研究不足。在这里,我们通过评估温度和栖息地特征对阿尔卑斯山羚羊 Rupicapra rupicapra rupicapra 体重变化的交互作用,研究森林地区是否可以减轻气候变化对生活史特征的影响。我们检查了 1993 年至 2019 年期间在奥地利东部阿尔卑斯山 28 个山脉中收集的 20573 只一岁龄羚羊的数据,这些山脉的森林覆盖率不同。我们的研究结果表明,在森林覆盖率较高的地区,羚羊体重的时间下降幅度不那么明显。对于仅生活在森林栖息地的羚羊,体重没有明显的时间变化。体重的变化受到密度和积雪覆盖的相互作用以及春季温度和森林覆盖的相互作用的影响,这支持了森林作为热缓冲体的作用,以减轻温度升高对山地有蹄类动物生活史特征的影响。反过来,这项研究表明了森林对气候变化影响的缓冲作用。因此,评估气候变化对居住在山区的物种的生活史特征和种群动态的影响,应考虑物种对不同栖息地类型的利用和可获得性的可塑性。