Sáenz-Jiménez Fausto, Parrado-Vargas María Alejandra, González-Maya José F, Carvajal-Cogollo Juan Emiro
Museo de Historia Natural Luis Gonzalo Andrade, Facultad de Ciencias, Grupo de investigación Biodiversidad y Conservación, Universidad Pedagógica y Tecnológica de Colombia, Tunja, Boyacá, Colombia.
Proyecto de Conservación de Aguas y Tierras - ProCAT Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia.
PLoS One. 2025 May 27;20(5):e0321817. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0321817. eCollection 2025.
Habitat loss and climate change are major drivers of biodiversity loss, but their synergistic effects and functional perspectives have to be better understood. We employed species distribution models under future contrasting socioeconomic scenarios to assess the impacts of climate change and human footprint on avian frugivore and nectarivore functional groups in the Magdalena Valley, a highly transformed and biodiverse region in Colombia. We constructed the functional groups based on a dissimilarity matrix with 16 anatomical and ecological traits. Two types of future climatic refugia (type 1: areas that will maintain the current climatic conditions and type 2: regions outside the current distribution area that will have the current climatic conditions) were identified to guide conservation efforts for these groups and associated ecosystem services. Of the 27 functional groups identified, 19 are projected to undergo range reductions of 1-75%, with an average upward shift of their climatic niches along the altitudinal gradient of 690 m. Large frugivores from intermediate elevations, such as toucans and cracids, as well as nectarivores with extreme adaptations and specializations, are expected to experience the most severe range reductions. Distributional and altitudinal shifts will lead to spatial reorganization of communities and a reduction or complete loss of functional group richness, particularly in lowland areas. This could impact ecosystem services relevant for degraded area restoration, such as seed dispersal, fruit availability, and pollination of specialized plant species with economic importance. The low representation of future climatic refugia within protected areas highlights the need to incorporate climate change trends into future conservation strategies for these landscapes.
栖息地丧失和气候变化是生物多样性丧失的主要驱动因素,但其协同效应和功能视角仍有待深入了解。我们运用未来不同社会经济情景下的物种分布模型,评估气候变化和人类足迹对哥伦比亚高度转型且生物多样的马格达莱纳河谷鸟类食果动物和食蜜动物功能群的影响。我们基于包含16种解剖学和生态学特征的相异矩阵构建功能群。识别出两种未来气候避难所类型(类型1:将维持当前气候条件的区域;类型2:当前分布区域之外将具有当前气候条件的区域),以指导针对这些功能群及相关生态系统服务的保护工作。在识别出的27个功能群中,预计19个功能群的分布范围将缩小1% - 75%,其气候生态位沿海拔梯度平均向上移动690米。来自中等海拔的大型食果动物,如巨嘴鸟和凤冠雉,以及具有极端适应性和特化的食蜜动物,预计将经历最严重的分布范围缩小。分布和海拔变化将导致群落的空间重组,以及功能群丰富度的降低或完全丧失,尤其是在低地地区。这可能会影响与退化地区恢复相关的生态系统服务,如种子传播、果实供应以及对具有经济重要性的特殊植物物种的授粉。保护区内未来气候避难所的代表性较低,这凸显了将气候变化趋势纳入这些景观未来保护策略的必要性。