Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.
Department of Biology, Evolutionary Ecology Laboratories, and Monte L. Bean Museum Provo, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Jan;28(2):644-653. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15940. Epub 2021 Oct 27.
Understanding how terrestrial biotic communities have responded to glacial recession since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) can inform present and future responses of biota to climate change. In Antarctica, the Transantarctic Mountains (TAM) have experienced massive environmental changes associated with glacial retreat since the LGM, yet we have few clues as to how its soil invertebrate-dominated animal communities have responded. Here, we surveyed soil invertebrate fauna from above and below proposed LGM elevations along transects located at 12 features across the Shackleton Glacier region. Our transects captured gradients of surface ages possibly up to 4.5 million years and the soils have been free from human disturbance for their entire history. Our data support the hypothesis that soils exposed during the LGM are now less suitable habitats for invertebrates than those that have been exposed by deglaciation following the LGM. Our results show that faunal abundance, community composition, and diversity were all strongly affected by climate-driven changes since the LGM. Soils more recently exposed by the glacial recession (as indicated by distances from present ice surfaces) had higher faunal abundances and species richness than older exposed soils. Higher abundances of the dominant nematode Scottnema were found in older exposed soils, while Eudorylaimus, Plectus, tardigrades, and rotifers preferentially occurred in more recently exposed soils. Approximately 30% of the soils from which invertebrates could be extracted had only Scottnema, and these single-taxon communities occurred more frequently in soils exposed for longer periods of time. Our structural equation modeling of abiotic drivers highlighted soil salinity as a key mediator of Scottnema responses to soil exposure age. These changes in soil habitat suitability and biotic communities since the LGM indicate that Antarctic terrestrial biodiversity throughout the TAM will be highly altered by climate warming.
了解陆地生物群落自末次冰期最大值(LGM)以来对冰川退缩的响应方式,可以为生物群落在当前和未来对气候变化的响应提供信息。在南极洲,横断山脉(TAM)自 LGM 以来经历了与冰川退缩相关的大规模环境变化,但我们对其以土壤无脊椎动物为主的动物群落的响应方式知之甚少。在这里,我们沿着位于沙克尔顿冰川地区 12 个特征的横断面,从提议的 LGM 海拔以上和以下调查了土壤无脊椎动物区系。我们的横断面捕捉到了表面年龄的梯度,其年龄可能高达 450 万年,而且这些土壤在其整个历史中都没有受到人为干扰。我们的数据支持这样一种假设,即在 LGM 期间暴露的土壤现在对无脊椎动物的适宜性不如 LGM 后冰川消退所暴露的土壤。我们的结果表明,自 LGM 以来,气候驱动的变化强烈影响了动物区系的丰度、群落组成和多样性。由于冰川退缩而最近暴露的土壤(以距离当前冰面的距离来表示)的动物区系丰度和物种丰富度高于较老的暴露土壤。在较老的暴露土壤中发现了更高丰度的优势线虫斯科特线虫,而 Eudorylaimus、Plectus、缓步动物和轮虫则优先出现在最近暴露的土壤中。大约 30%的可以提取无脊椎动物的土壤中只有斯科特线虫,这些单一种群的群落更频繁地出现在暴露时间较长的土壤中。我们对非生物驱动因素的结构方程模型强调了土壤盐分作为斯科特线虫对土壤暴露年龄响应的关键介质。自 LGM 以来,土壤栖息地适宜性和生物群落的这些变化表明,TAM 整个南极大陆的陆地生物多样性将因气候变暖而发生重大变化。