Department of Biological Sciences, Webster University, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Division of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Nov;28(21):6165-6179. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16348. Epub 2022 Aug 18.
Pollinators at high elevations face multiple threats from climate change including heat stress, failure to phenological match advancing flower resources and competitive pressure from range-expanding species of lower elevations. We conducted long-term multi-site surveys of alpine bumble bees to determine how phenology of range-stable and range-expanding species is responding to climate change. We ask whether bumble bee responses generate mismatches with floral resources, and whether these mismatches in turn promote community disruption and potential species replacement. In alpine environments of the central Rocky Mountains, range-stable and range-expanding bumble bees exhibit phenological mismatches with flowering host plants due to earlier flowering of preferred resources under warmer spring temperatures. However, workers of range-stable species are more canalised in their foraging schedules, exploiting a relatively narrow portion of the flowering season. Specifically, range-stable species show less variance in phenology in response to temporally and spatially changing conditions than range-expanding ones. Because flowering duration drives the seasonal abundance of floral resources at the landscape scale, we hypothesize that canalisation of phenology in alpine bumble bees could reduce their access to earlier or later season flowers. Warmer conditions are decreasing abundances of range-stable alpine bumble bees above the timberline, increasing abundance of range-expanding species, and facilitating a novel and more species-diverse bumble bee community. However, this trend is not explained by greater phenological mismatch of range-stable bees. Results suggest that conversion of historic habitats for cold-adapted alpine bumble bee species into refugia for more heat-tolerant congeners is disrupting bumble bee communities at high elevations, though the precise mechanisms accounting for these changes are not yet known. If warming continues, we predict that the transient increase in diversity due to colonization by historically low-elevation species will likely give way to declines of alpine bumble bees in the central Rocky Mountains.
高海拔地区的传粉媒介面临着多种气候变化威胁,包括热应激、未能与提前开花的花卉资源物候相匹配,以及来自低海拔地区扩展物种的竞争压力。我们对高山大黄蜂进行了长期的多地点调查,以确定稳定分布和扩展分布物种的物候如何对气候变化做出响应。我们询问大黄蜂的反应是否会导致与花卉资源不匹配,以及这些不匹配是否反过来会导致群落破坏和潜在的物种替代。在落基山脉中部的高山环境中,由于春季温暖导致首选资源提前开花,稳定分布和扩展分布的大黄蜂与开花的宿主植物表现出物候不匹配。然而,稳定分布物种的工蜂在觅食时间上更加定型,只在相对较窄的一段时间内利用花期。具体来说,与扩展分布物种相比,稳定分布物种对时间和空间变化条件的物候变化具有更小的变异性。由于开花持续时间驱动了景观尺度上花卉资源的季节性丰度,我们假设高山大黄蜂物候定型可以减少它们对早期或晚期开花的利用。温暖的条件降低了林线以上稳定分布的高山大黄蜂的丰度,增加了扩展分布物种的丰度,并促进了一个新的、物种多样性更高的大黄蜂群落。然而,这种趋势不能用稳定分布蜜蜂更大的物候不匹配来解释。研究结果表明,将适应寒冷的高山大黄蜂历史栖息地转化为更耐热的近缘种的避难所,正在破坏高海拔地区的大黄蜂群落,尽管导致这些变化的确切机制尚不清楚。如果变暖继续下去,我们预计,由于历史上低海拔物种的殖民化而导致的多样性短暂增加,很可能会导致落基山脉中部高山大黄蜂的数量下降。