Arid
DOI10.1111/j.1365-2486.2011.02438.x
Predicting small-mammal responses to climatic warming: autecology, geographic range, and the Holocene fossil record
Terry, Rebecca C.; Li, Cheng (Lily); Hadly, Elizabeth A.
通讯作者Terry, Rebecca C.
来源期刊GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
ISSN1354-1013
EISSN1365-2486
出版年2011
卷号17期号:10页码:3019-3034
英文摘要

Forecasting how species will respond to climatic change requires knowledge of past community dynamics. Here we use time-series data from the small-mammal fossil records of two caves in the Great Basin of the American West to evaluate how contrasting and variable local paleoclimates have shaped small-mammal abundance dynamics over the last similar to 7500 years of climatic change. We then predict how species and communities will respond to future scenarios of increased warming and aridity coupled with continued spread of an invasive annual grass (Bromus tectorum). We find that most community-level responses to climatic change occur in the mammalian abundance structure at both sites; the dominance of the community by individuals from species with a southern geographic affinity increases with climatic warming. This suggests that responses occurred in situ rather than by the immigration of new taxa over this time interval. Despite predictability at the community-scale, species-level relationships between abundance and climate are variable and are not necessarily explained by a species’ geographic affinity. Species present at both sites, however, exhibit remarkably similar responses to climate at each site, indicating that species autecology (specifically dietary functional group) is important in determining response to climatic warming. Regression-tree analyses show remarkable concordance between the two cave faunas and highlight the importance of a granivorous dietary strategy in this desert ecosystem. Under projections of increased temperature and decreased precipitation over the next 50 years, our results indicate that granivores should thrive as communities become more dominated by individuals with a southern geographic affinity. Granivores, however, are negatively impacted by the invasion of cheatgrass. The last century of anthropogenic impacts has thus placed granivores at a greater risk of extinction than predicted under climate-only scenarios.


英文关键词climate change conservation paleobiology functional group geographic range Great Basin Holocene paleoecology small mammals
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000294571700002
WOS关键词GREAT-BASIN ; DESERT ; COMMUNITY ; DISTRIBUTIONS ; CALIFORNIA ; DYNAMICS ; FIDELITY ; INVASION ; RODENTS ; SEED
WOS类目Biodiversity Conservation ; Ecology ; Environmental Sciences
WOS研究方向Biodiversity & Conservation ; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/168345
作者单位Stanford Univ, Dept Biol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
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GB/T 7714
Terry, Rebecca C.,Li, Cheng ,Hadly, Elizabeth A.. Predicting small-mammal responses to climatic warming: autecology, geographic range, and the Holocene fossil record[J],2011,17(10):3019-3034.
APA Terry, Rebecca C.,Li, Cheng ,&Hadly, Elizabeth A..(2011).Predicting small-mammal responses to climatic warming: autecology, geographic range, and the Holocene fossil record.GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY,17(10),3019-3034.
MLA Terry, Rebecca C.,et al."Predicting small-mammal responses to climatic warming: autecology, geographic range, and the Holocene fossil record".GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY 17.10(2011):3019-3034.
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