Mendes Sara Beatriz, Nogales Manuel, Vargas Pablo, Olesen Jens M, Marrero Patrícia, Romero Javier, Rumeu Beatriz, González-Castro Aarón, Heleno Ruben
Associate Laboratory TERRA, Department of Life Sciences, Centre for Functional Ecology, University of Coimbra, Calçada Martim de Freitas, 3000-456, Coimbra, Portugal.
Island Ecology and Evolution Research Group, Instituto de Productos Naturales y Agrobiología (IPNA-CSIC), Astrofísico Francisco Sánchez, 38206, La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain.
New Phytol. 2025 Feb;245(3):1315-1329. doi: 10.1111/nph.20300. Epub 2024 Dec 2.
Climate change is forcing species to shift their distribution ranges. Animal seed dispersers might be particularly important in assisting plants tracking suitable climates to higher elevations. However, this role is still poorly understood due to a lack of comprehensive multi-guild datasets along elevational gradients. We compiled seed dispersal networks for the five altitudinal vegetation belts of the Tenerife Island (0-3718 m above sea level) to explore how plant and animal species might facilitate the mutual colonisation of uphill habitats under climate change. The overall network comprised 283 distinct interactions between 73 plant and 27 animal species, with seed dispersers offering viable pathways for plants to colonise upper vegetation belts. A pivotal role is played by a lizard as island-level hub, while four birds and one introduced mammal (rabbit) are also important connectors between belts. Eleven plant species were empirically found to be actively dispersed to elevations beyond their current known range, with observed vertical dispersal distances largely surpassing those required to escape climate change. Furthermore, over half of the plants arriving at higher elevations were exotic. Functionally diverse disperser communities are crucial for enabling plants tracking climate change on mountains, but exotic plants might particularly benefit from this upward lift.
气候变化正迫使物种改变其分布范围。动物种子传播者在协助植物向更高海拔追踪适宜气候方面可能尤为重要。然而,由于缺乏沿海拔梯度的全面多类群数据集,这一作用仍知之甚少。我们编制了特内里费岛五个海拔植被带(海拔0 - 3718米)的种子传播网络,以探究植物和动物物种在气候变化下如何促进上坡栖息地的相互殖民化。整个网络包括73种植物和27种动物之间的283种不同相互作用,种子传播者为植物殖民上部植被带提供了可行途径。一只蜥蜴作为岛屿级枢纽发挥着关键作用,而四种鸟类和一种引入的哺乳动物(兔子)也是各植被带之间的重要连接者。经实证发现,11种植物被积极传播到超出其当前已知范围的海拔高度,观察到的垂直传播距离大大超过了逃避气候变化所需的距离。此外,到达更高海拔的植物中超过一半是外来物种。功能多样的传播者群落对于使植物在山区追踪气候变化至关重要,但外来植物可能尤其会从这种向上迁移中受益。