The Environment Institute and School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Nov;28(22):6602-6617. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16375. Epub 2022 Aug 28.
Processes leading to range contractions and population declines of Arctic megafauna during the late Pleistocene and early Holocene are uncertain, with intense debate on the roles of human hunting, climatic change, and their synergy. Obstacles to a resolution have included an overreliance on correlative rather than process-explicit approaches for inferring drivers of distributional and demographic change. Here, we disentangle the ecological mechanisms and threats that were integral in the decline and extinction of the muskox (Ovibos moschatus) in Eurasia and in its expansion in North America using process-explicit macroecological models. The approach integrates modern and fossil occurrence records, ancient DNA, spatiotemporal reconstructions of past climatic change, species-specific population ecology, and the growth and spread of anatomically modern humans. We show that accurately reconstructing inferences of past demographic changes for muskox over the last 21,000 years require high dispersal abilities, large maximum densities, and a small Allee effect. Analyses of validated process-explicit projections indicate that climatic change was the primary driver of muskox distribution shifts and demographic changes across its previously extensive (circumpolar) range, with populations responding negatively to rapid warming events. Regional analyses show that the range collapse and extinction of the muskox in Europe (~13,000 years ago) was likely caused by humans operating in synergy with climatic warming. In Canada and Greenland, climatic change and human activities probably combined to drive recent population sizes. The impact of past climatic change on the range and extinction dynamics of muskox during the Pleistocene-Holocene transition signals a vulnerability of this species to future increased warming. By better establishing the ecological processes that shaped the distribution of the muskox through space and time, we show that process-explicit macroecological models have important applications for the future conservation and management of this iconic species in a warming Arctic.
在更新世晚期和全新世早期,导致北极巨型动物种群范围收缩和数量减少的过程尚不确定,人类狩猎、气候变化及其协同作用的作用存在激烈争论。阻碍解决问题的因素包括过度依赖相关性而不是明确过程的方法来推断分布和种群变化的驱动因素。在这里,我们使用明确过程的宏观生态模型来解开麝香牛(Ovibos moschatus)在欧亚大陆下降和灭绝以及在北美的扩张过程中涉及的生态机制和威胁。该方法整合了现代和化石出现记录、古代 DNA、过去气候变化的时空重建、特定物种的种群生态学以及解剖学上现代人类的增长和传播。我们表明,要准确重建过去 21000 年来麝香牛种群变化的推断,需要具有高扩散能力、最大密度大且艾利效应小。对经过验证的明确过程预测的分析表明,气候变化是麝香牛分布转移和在其以前广泛分布(环极)范围内的种群变化的主要驱动因素,种群对快速变暖事件的反应是负面的。区域分析表明,麝香牛在欧洲(约 13000 年前)的范围缩小和灭绝可能是人类与气候变暖协同作用的结果。在加拿大和格陵兰,气候变化和人类活动可能共同导致了最近的种群规模减少。过去气候变化对麝香牛在更新世-全新世过渡期间的范围和灭绝动态的影响表明,该物种对未来变暖的脆弱性。通过更好地确定塑造麝香牛在空间和时间上分布的生态过程,我们表明明确过程的宏观生态模型对未来在变暖的北极保护和管理这种标志性物种具有重要应用。