globalchange  > 气候变化事实与影响
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12933
WOS记录号: WOS:000460767200004
论文题名:
Phenotypic biomarkers of climatic impacts on declining insect populations: A key role for decadal drought, thermal buffering and amplification effects and host plant dynamics
作者: Carnicer, Jofre1,2; Stefanescu, Constanti2,3; Vives-Ingla, Maria1; Lopez, Carlos2; Cortizas, Sofia1; Wheat, Christopher4; Vila, Roger5; Llusia, Joan2; Penuelas, Josep2
通讯作者: Carnicer, Jofre
刊名: JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
ISSN: 0021-8790
EISSN: 1365-2656
出版年: 2019
卷: 88, 期:3, 页码:376-391
语种: 英语
英文关键词: butterflies ; climate change ; host plant ; multiannual drought ; phenotypic biomarker ; Pieris napi ; thermal buffering
WOS关键词: BUTTERFLY SPECIES RICHNESS ; BODY-SIZE ; PIERIS-RAPAE ; FOOD PLANTS ; TEMPERATURE ; HABITAT ; RESPONSES ; GRADIENTS ; NITROGEN ; STRESS
WOS学科分类: Ecology ; Zoology
WOS研究方向: Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Zoology
英文摘要:

Widespread population declines have been reported for diverse Mediterranean butterflies over the last three decades, and have been significantly associated with increased global change impacts. The specific landscape and climatic drivers of these declines remain uncertain for most declining species. Here, we analyse whether plastic phenotypic traits of a model butterfly species (Pieris napi) perform as reliable biomarkers of vulnerability to extreme temperature impacts in natural populations, showing contrasting trends in thermally exposed and thermally buffered populations. We also examine whether improved descriptions of thermal exposure of insect populations can be achieved by combining multiple information sources (i.e., integrating measurements of habitat thermal buffering, habitat thermal amplification, host plant transpiration, and experimental assessments of thermal death time (TDT), thermal avoidance behaviour (TAB) and thermally induced trait plasticity). These integrative analyses are conducted in two demographically declining and two non-declining populations of P. napi. The results show that plastic phenotypic traits (butterfly body mass and wing size) are reliable biomarkers of population vulnerability to extreme thermal conditions. Butterfly wing size is strongly reduced only in thermally exposed populations during summer drought periods. Laboratory rearing of these populations documented reduced wing size due to significant negative effects of increased temperatures affecting larval growth. We conclude that these thermal biomarkers are indicative of the population vulnerability to increasing global warming impacts, showing contrasting trends in thermally exposed and buffered populations. Thermal effects in host plant microsites significantly differ between populations, with stressful thermal conditions only effectively ameliorated in mid-elevation populations. In lowland populations, we observe a sixfold reduction in vegetation thermal buffering effects, and larval growth occurs in these populations at significantly higher temperatures. Lowland populations show reduced host plant quality (C/N ratio), reduced leaf transpiration rates and complete above-ground plant senescence during the peak of summer drought. Amplified host plant temperatures are observed in open microsites, reaching thermal thresholds that can affect larval survival. Overall, our results suggest that butterfly population vulnerability to long-term drought periods is associated with multiple co-occurring and interrelated ecological factors, including limited vegetation thermal buffering effects at lowland sites, significant drought impacts on host plant transpiration and amplified leaf surface temperature, as well as reduced leaf quality linked to the seasonal advance of plant phenology. Our results also identify multiannual summer droughts affecting larval growing periods as a key driver of the recently reported butterfly population declines in the Mediterranean biome.


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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/130715
Appears in Collections:气候变化事实与影响

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作者单位: 1.Univ Barcelona, Dept Evolutionary Biol Ecol & Environm Sci, Barcelona, Spain
2.CREAF, E08193 Bellaterra Cerdanyola del Valles, Catalonia, Spain
3.Nat Hist Museum Granollers, Granollers, Spain
4.Univ Stockholm, Dept Zool Populat Genet, Stockholm, Sweden
5.Inst Evolutionary Biol CSIC UPF, Barcelona, Spain

Recommended Citation:
Carnicer, Jofre,Stefanescu, Constanti,Vives-Ingla, Maria,et al. Phenotypic biomarkers of climatic impacts on declining insect populations: A key role for decadal drought, thermal buffering and amplification effects and host plant dynamics[J]. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY,2019-01-01,88(3):376-391
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