Environmental Archaeology Laboratory, Department of Historical, Philosophical and Religious studies, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA), Oslo, Norway.
Proc Biol Sci. 2022 Jun 29;289(1977):20212734. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2021.2734. Epub 2022 Jun 22.
Since the last Ice Age ( 115 000-11 700 years ago), the geographical ranges of most plants and animals have shifted, expanded or contracted. Understanding the timing, geographical patterns and drivers of past changes in insect communities is essential for evaluating the biodiversity implications of future climate changes, yet our knowledge of long-term patterns is limited. We applied a network modelling approach to the recent fossil record of northwestern European beetles to investigate how their taxonomic and trait composition changed during the past 16 000 years. We found two major changes in beetle faunas 4000-3500 and 10 000-9500 years ago, coinciding with periods of human population growth in the Late Holocene and climate warming in the Early Holocene. Our results demonstrate that humans have affected insect biodiversity since at least the introduction of agropastoralism, with landscape-scale effects that can be observed at sites away from areas of direct human impact.
自上一个冰河时代(115000-11700 年前)以来,大多数动植物的地理分布范围已经发生了转移、扩张或收缩。了解过去昆虫群落变化的时间、地理模式和驱动因素,对于评估未来气候变化对生物多样性的影响至关重要,但我们对长期模式的了解有限。我们应用网络建模方法对西北欧甲虫的最新化石记录进行了研究,以调查它们的分类和特征组成在过去 16000 年中是如何变化的。我们发现,甲虫区系在 4000-3500 年前和 10000-9500 年前发生了两次重大变化,这与全新世晚期人类人口增长和全新世早期气候变暖的时期相吻合。我们的研究结果表明,人类自农业和畜牧业出现以来,至少已经对昆虫生物多样性产生了影响,在远离人类直接影响的地区的景观尺度上都可以观察到这种影响。