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The projected timing of abrupt ecological disruption from climate change 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7804) : 496-+
作者:  Gorgulla, Christoph;  Boeszoermenyi, Andras;  Wang, Zi-Fu;  Fischer, Patrick D.;  Coote, Paul W.;  Padmanabha Das, Krishna M.;  Malets, Yehor S.;  Radchenko, Dmytro S.;  Moroz, Yurii S.;  Scott, David A.;  Fackeldey, Konstantin;  Hoffmann, Moritz;  Iavniuk, Iryna;  Wagner, Gerhard;  Arthanari, Haribabu
收藏  |  浏览/下载:56/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/13

As anthropogenic climate change continues the risks to biodiversity will increase over time, with future projections indicating that a potentially catastrophic loss of global biodiversity is on the horizon(1-3). However, our understanding of when and how abruptly this climate-driven disruption of biodiversity will occur is limited because biodiversity forecasts typically focus on individual snapshots of the future. Here we use annual projections (from 1850 to 2100) of temperature and precipitation across the ranges of more than 30,000 marine and terrestrial species to estimate the timing of their exposure to potentially dangerous climate conditions. We project that future disruption of ecological assemblages as a result of climate change will be abrupt, because within any given ecological assemblage the exposure of most species to climate conditions beyond their realized niche limits occurs almost simultaneously. Under a high-emissions scenario (representative concentration pathway (RCP) 8.5), such abrupt exposure events begin before 2030 in tropical oceans and spread to tropical forests and higher latitudes by 2050. If global warming is kept below 2 degrees C, less than 2% of assemblages globally are projected to undergo abrupt exposure events of more than 20% of their constituent species  however, the risk accelerates with the magnitude of warming, threatening 15% of assemblages at 4 degrees C, with similar levels of risk in protected and unprotected areas. These results highlight the impending risk of sudden and severe biodiversity losses from climate change and provide a framework for predicting both when and where these events may occur.


Using annual projections of temperature and precipitation to estimate when species will be exposed to potentially harmful climate conditions reveals that disruption of ecological assemblages as a result of climate change will be abrupt and could start as early as the current decade.


  
Dams have varying impacts on fish communities across latitudes: a quantitative synthesis 期刊论文
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2019, 22 (9) : 1501-1516
作者:  Turgeon, Katrine;  Turpin, Christian;  Gregory-Eaves, Irene
收藏  |  浏览/下载:5/0  |  提交时间:2019/11/27
Biomes  fish  fluvial specialist  hydroelectricity  impoundment  invasive  meta-analysis  reservoirs  species assemblages  trophic level position  tropical  
Human activity is altering the world's zoogeographical regions 期刊论文
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2019, 22 (8) : 1297-1305
作者:  Bernardo-Madrid, Ruben;  Calatayud, Joaquin;  Gonzalez-Suarez, Manuela;  Rosvall, Martin;  Lucas, Pablo M.;  Rueda, Marta;  Antonelli, Alexandre;  Revilla, Eloy
收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2019/11/27
Conservation  human impacts  global change  extinction  invasion  threatened species  species assemblages  uncertainty  robustness  Bioregions  
Resisting annihilation: relationships between functional trait dissimilarity, assemblage competitive power and allelopathy 期刊论文
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2018, 21 (9) : 1390-1400
作者:  Muhl, Rika M. W.;  Roelke, Daniel L.;  Zohary, Tamar;  Moustaka-Gouni, Maria;  Sommer, Ulrich;  Borics, Gabor;  Gaedke, Ursula;  Withrow, Frances G.;  Bhattacharyya, Joydeb
收藏  |  浏览/下载:5/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
Allelopathy  exploitative competition  interference competition  intransitivity  lumpy coexistence  neutrality  species supersaturated assemblages