Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA; School of Natural Resources, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA.
Trends Ecol Evol. 2023 Apr;38(4):324-336. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2022.10.008. Epub 2022 Nov 16.
Animals are facing novel 'timescapes' in which the stimuli entraining their daily activity patterns no longer match historical conditions due to anthropogenic disturbance. However, the ecological effects (e.g., altered physiology, species interactions) of novel activity timing are virtually unknown. We reviewed 1328 studies and found relatively few focusing on anthropogenic effects on activity timing. We suggest three hypotheses to stimulate future research: (i) activity-timing mismatches determine ecological effects, (ii) duration and timing of timescape modification influence effects, and (iii) consequences of altered activity timing vary biogeographically due to broad-scale variation in factors compressing timescapes. The continued growth of sampling technologies promises to facilitate the study of the consequences of altered activity timing, with emerging applications for biodiversity conservation.
动物正面临着新的“时间景观”,由于人为干扰,诱发其日常活动模式的刺激不再与历史条件相匹配。然而,对于新的活动时间的生态影响(例如,改变的生理学、物种相互作用)实际上是未知的。我们回顾了 1328 项研究,发现相对较少的研究关注人为因素对活动时间的影响。我们提出了三个假设来激发未来的研究:(i)活动时间不匹配决定了生态影响,(ii)时间景观改变的持续时间和时间影响效应,以及(iii)由于广泛的因素压缩时间景观,活动时间改变的后果在生物地理上有所不同。采样技术的持续发展有望促进对改变活动时间的后果的研究,新兴的应用于生物多样性保护。