Georgina Mace Centre for The Living Planet, Department of Life Sciences, Silwood Park, Imperial College London, Ascot, UK.
School of Engineering, Arts, Science & Technology, University of Suffolk, Ipswich, UK.
J Anim Ecol. 2023 Feb;92(2):297-309. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13788. Epub 2022 Aug 17.
Determining when animal populations have experienced stress in the past is fundamental to understanding how risk factors drive contemporary and future species' responses to environmental change. For insects, quantifying stress and associating it with environmental factors has been challenging due to a paucity of time-series data and because detectable population-level responses can show varying lag effects. One solution is to leverage historic entomological specimens to detect morphological proxies of stress experienced at the time stressors emerged, allowing us to more accurately determine population responses. Here we studied specimens of four bumblebee species, an invaluable group of insect pollinators, from five museums collected across Britain over the 20th century. We calculated the degree of fluctuating asymmetry (FA; random deviations from bilateral symmetry) between the right and left forewings as a potential proxy of developmental stress. We: (a) investigated whether baseline FA levels vary between species, and how this compares between the first and second half of the century; (b) determined the extent of FA change over the century in the four bumblebee species, and whether this followed a linear or nonlinear trend; (c) tested which annual climatic conditions correlated with increased FA in bumblebees. Species differed in their baseline FA, with FA being higher in the two species that have recently expanded their ranges in Britain. Overall, FA significantly increased over the century but followed a nonlinear trend, with the increase starting c. 1925. We found relatively warm and wet years were associated with higher FA. Collectively our findings show that FA in bumblebees increased over the 20th century and under weather conditions that will likely increase in frequency with climate change. By plotting FA trends and quantifying the contribution of annual climate conditions on past populations, we provide an important step towards improving our understanding of how environmental factors could impact future populations of wild beneficial insects.
确定动物种群过去何时经历过压力对于理解风险因素如何驱动当代和未来物种对环境变化的反应至关重要。对于昆虫来说,由于时间序列数据的缺乏,以及可检测的种群水平反应可能显示出不同的滞后效应,因此量化压力并将其与环境因素相关联一直具有挑战性。一种解决方案是利用历史昆虫标本来检测压力源出现时经历的形态学压力代理,从而更准确地确定种群反应。在这里,我们研究了来自五个英国博物馆在 20 世纪收集的四种熊蜂物种(一种非常宝贵的昆虫传粉媒介)的标本。我们计算了右前翅和左前翅之间的波动不对称程度(FA;双侧对称性的随机偏差),作为发育压力的潜在代理。我们:(a)研究了物种之间的 FA 基线水平是否存在差异,以及这种差异在本世纪的前半叶和后半叶之间的比较情况;(b)确定了四个熊蜂物种在一个世纪内 FA 的变化程度,以及这种变化是否遵循线性或非线性趋势;(c)测试了哪些年度气候条件与熊蜂 FA 的增加相关。物种的 FA 基线水平存在差异,在最近在英国扩大分布范围的两个物种中,FA 水平较高。总的来说,FA 在一个世纪内显著增加,但呈非线性趋势,增加始于 1925 年左右。我们发现相对温暖和湿润的年份与 FA 较高有关。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,20 世纪以来熊蜂的 FA 增加了,而且在未来随着气候变化,这种情况可能会增加。通过绘制 FA 趋势并量化年度气候条件对过去种群的贡献,我们朝着提高我们对环境因素如何影响未来野生有益昆虫种群的理解迈出了重要一步。