Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.
Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Aug 6;121(32):e2310075121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2310075121. Epub 2024 Jul 29.
As human-caused climate changes accelerate, California will experience hydrologic and temperature conditions different than any encountered in recorded history. How will these changes affect the state's freshwater ecosystems? Rivers, lakes, and wetlands are managed as a water resource, but they also support a complex web of life, ranging from bacteria, fungi, and algae to macrophytes, woody plants, invertebrates, fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. In much of the state, native freshwater organisms already struggle to survive massive water diversions and dams, deteriorating water quality, extensive land cover modification for agriculture and urban development, and invasions of exotic species. In the face of climate change, we need to expand efforts to recover degraded ecosystems and to protect the resilience, health, and viability of existing ecosystems. For this, more process-based understanding of river, lake, and wetlands ecosystems is needed to forecast how systems will respond to future climate change and to our interventions. This will require 1) expanding our ability to model mechanistically how freshwater biota and ecosystems respond to environmental change; 2) hypothesis-driven monitoring and field studies; 3) education and training to build research, practitioner, stewardship, and policy capabilities; and 4) developing tools and policies for building resilient ecosystems. A goals-driven, hypothesis-informed collaboration among tribes, state (and federal) agencies, nongovernmental organizations, academicians, and consultants is needed to accomplish these goals and to advance the skills and knowledge of the future workforce of practitioners, regulators, and researchers who must live with the climate changes that are already upon us and will intensify.
随着人为造成的气候变化加速,加利福尼亚将经历有记录以来从未遇到过的水文和温度条件。这些变化将如何影响该州的淡水生态系统?河流、湖泊和湿地作为水资源进行管理,但它们也支持着一个复杂的生命网络,从细菌、真菌和藻类到大型植物、木本植物、无脊椎动物、鱼类、两栖动物、爬行动物、鸟类和哺乳动物。在该州的大部分地区,本地淡水生物已经在努力应对大规模的水资源转移和大坝建设、水质恶化、为农业和城市发展而广泛改变土地覆盖、以及外来物种入侵等问题。面对气候变化,我们需要加大努力来恢复退化的生态系统,并保护现有生态系统的弹性、健康和生存能力。为此,需要更深入地了解河流、湖泊和湿地生态系统的过程,以便预测系统将如何应对未来的气候变化和我们的干预措施。这将需要:1)扩大我们的能力,以机制模型的方式模拟淡水生物区系和生态系统对环境变化的响应;2)进行基于假设的监测和实地研究;3)通过教育和培训来建立研究、实践、管理和政策方面的能力;4)开发工具和政策,以建设具有弹性的生态系统。需要一个以目标为导向、以假设为依据的部落、州(和联邦)机构、非政府组织、学者和顾问之间的合作,以实现这些目标,并提高未来从业者、监管者和研究人员的技能和知识水平,他们必须应对已经到来并将加剧的气候变化。