Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
W.K. Kellogg Biological Station, Department of Integrative Biology, Michigan State University, 3700 E Gull Lake Dr, Hickory Corners, MI 49060, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2022 Aug 25;62(2):164-178. doi: 10.1093/icb/icac055.
It has long been known that the outcome of species interactions depends on the environmental context in which they occur. Climate change research has sparked a renewed interest in context-dependent species interactions because rapidly changing abiotic environments will cause species interactions to occur in novel contexts and researchers must incorporate this in their predictions of species' responses to climate change. Here, we argue that predicting how the environment will alter the outcome of species interactions requires an integrative biology approach that focuses on the traits, mechanisms, and processes that bridge disciplines such as physiology, biomechanics, ecology, and evolutionary biology. Specifically, we advocate for quantifying how species differ in their tolerance and performance to both environmental challenges independent of species interactions, and in interactions with other species as a function of the environment. Such an approach increases our understanding of the mechanisms underlying outcomes of species interactions across different environmental contexts. This understanding will help determine how the outcome of species interactions affects the relative abundance and distribution of the interacting species in nature. A general theme that emerges from this perspective is that species are unable to maintain high levels of performance across different environmental contexts because of trade-offs between physiological tolerance to environmental challenges and performance in species interactions. Thus, an integrative biology paradigm that focuses on the trade-offs across environments, the physiological mechanisms involved, and how the ecological context impacts the outcome of species interactions provides a stronger framework to understand why species interactions are context dependent.
长期以来,人们都知道物种相互作用的结果取决于它们发生的环境背景。气候变化研究激发了人们对依赖环境的物种相互作用的重新关注,因为快速变化的非生物环境将导致物种相互作用发生在新的环境中,研究人员必须在预测物种对气候变化的反应时考虑到这一点。在这里,我们认为,预测环境将如何改变物种相互作用的结果需要一种综合生物学方法,该方法侧重于连接生理学、生物力学、生态学和进化生物学等学科的特征、机制和过程。具体来说,我们提倡量化物种在独立于物种相互作用的环境挑战和与其他物种相互作用时的耐受性和表现方面的差异,以及作为环境函数的差异。这种方法增加了我们对不同环境背景下物种相互作用结果背后机制的理解。这种理解将有助于确定物种相互作用的结果如何影响相互作用物种在自然界中的相对丰度和分布。从这个角度来看,一个出现的主题是,由于对环境挑战的生理耐受性和在物种相互作用中的表现之间的权衡,物种无法在不同的环境背景下保持高水平的表现。因此,一个关注跨环境权衡、涉及的生理机制以及生态背景如何影响物种相互作用结果的综合生物学范式,为理解为什么物种相互作用是依赖环境的提供了一个更强有力的框架。