Department of Evolution and Ecology, Bodega Marine Laboratory, University of California Davis, 2099 Westshore Road, Bodega Bay, California, 94923, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Vermont, 109 Carrigan Drive, Burlington, Vermont, 05405, USA.
Ecology. 2022 Feb;103(2):e03596. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3596. Epub 2021 Dec 20.
A huge fraction of global biodiversity resides within biogenic habitats that ameliorate physical stresses. In most cases, details of how physical conditions within facilitative habitats respond to external climate forcing remain unknown, hampering climate change predictions for many of the world's species. Using intertidal mussel beds as a model system, we characterize relationships among external climate conditions and within-microhabitat heat and desiccation conditions. We use these data, along with physiological tolerances of two common inhabitant taxa (the isopod Cirolana harfordi and the porcelain crab Petrolisthes cinctipes), to examine the magnitude of climate risk inside and outside biogenic habitat, applying an empirically derived model of evaporation to simulate mortality risk under a high-emissions climate-warming scenario. We found that biogenic microhabitat conditions responded so weakly to external climate parameters that mortality risk was largely unaffected by climate warming. In contrast, outside the biogenic habitat, desiccation drove substantial mortality in both species, even at temperatures 4.4-8.6°C below their hydrated thermal tolerances. These findings emphasize the importance of warming-exacerbated desiccation to climate-change risk and the role of biogenic habitats in buffering this less-appreciated stressor. Our results suggest that, when biogenic habitats remain intact, climate warming may have weak direct effects on organisms within them. Instead, risk to such taxa is likely to be indirect and tightly coupled with the fate of habitat-forming populations. Conserving and restoring biogenic habitats that offer climate refugia could therefore be crucial to supporting biodiversity in the face of climate warming.
大量的全球生物多样性存在于生物成因的栖息地中,这些栖息地可以减轻物理压力。在大多数情况下,促进生境中物理条件如何对外界气候强迫做出响应的细节仍然未知,这阻碍了对世界许多物种的气候变化预测。本研究以潮间带贻贝床为模型系统,描述了外部气候条件与微生境内部热和干燥条件之间的关系。我们利用这些数据,以及两种常见栖息类群(等足类 Cirolana harfordi 和瓷蟹 Petrolisthes cinctipes)的生理耐受性,研究了生物成因栖息地内外的气候风险程度,应用经验衍生的蒸发模型来模拟在高排放气候变暖情景下的死亡率风险。研究发现,生物成因的微生境条件对外界气候参数的响应非常弱,以至于死亡率风险基本上不受气候变暖的影响。相比之下,在生物成因栖息地之外,即使在温度比其水合热容忍度低 4.4-8.6°C 的情况下,干燥也会导致两种物种的大量死亡。这些发现强调了变暖加剧干燥对气候变化风险的重要性,以及生物成因栖息地在缓冲这种被低估的胁迫因素方面的作用。研究结果表明,在生物成因栖息地保持完整的情况下,气候变暖可能对其中的生物直接影响较弱。相反,此类类群的风险很可能是间接的,并且与形成栖息地的种群的命运紧密耦合。因此,保护和恢复提供气候避难所的生物成因栖息地对于在气候变暖的情况下支持生物多样性可能至关重要。