Different threshold responses in spontaneously changing postagrogenic forest and unmanaged grassland. Shifts in small mammal populations and communities triggered by an extraordinary drought

被引:0
作者
Shchipanov, Nikolay A. [1 ]
Tumasian, Philipp A. [2 ]
Kuptsov, Alexander V. [1 ]
Raspopova, Alexandra A. [3 ]
Kasatkin, Mikhail V. [4 ]
Kalinin, Alexey A. [1 ]
Demidova, Tatiana B. [1 ]
Pavlova, Svetlana V. [1 ]
机构
[1] Russian Acad Sci, AN Severtsov Inst Ecol & Evolut, 33 Leninsky Pr, Moscow 119071, Russia
[2] Moscow Zoo, 1 Bolshaya Gruzinskaya Str, Moscow 123242, Russia
[3] Lomonosov Moscow State Univ, 1 Leninskie Gory Str, Moscow 119234, Russia
[4] State Biol Museum Named K A Timiryazev, 15 Malaya Gruzinskaya Str, Moscow 123242, Russia
关键词
Ecosystem resilience; Population trajectory; Climatic trigger event; Voles; Shrews; RESILIENCE; RESTORATION; VEGETATION; LANDSCAPE; ECOLOGY; NONRESIDENCE; MIGRATIONS; ECOSYSTEMS; FARMLAND; RODENTS;
D O I
10.1007/s10661-025-13694-3
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Due to their resilience, various biological systems under environmental changes typically exhibit nonlinear responses with sudden, abrupt shifts. Although such shifts are theoretically expected, few studies traced state-and-transition dynamics in nature (Liu et al., Science 317:1513-1516, 2007). We analysed 18 years' data to trace biomass patterns, species assemblages and small mammals' population trajectories in spontaneously growing forest on formerly ploughed field, hereafter, the postagrogenic forest, and in unmanaged former pasture, hereafter, the grassland. The clear response at individual, populational and ecosystem scales triggered by extraordinary 2010 drought was observed. In the postagrogenic forest, transitioning to the historical ecosystem state, we found a shift from the grassland type of the small mammals' biomass pattern to the forest type with the abrupt reorganisation of the small mammals' community. In the grassland, a relatively steady novel ecosystem, we revealed only a long-term diminishing of total small mammals' biomass, i.e. a regime shift, while maintaining the same functional structure. The changes were based on population response. The bank vole did not show any population reaction, which testifies the ability of individuals to tolerate the drought. The common shrew experienced a population depression, which in postagrogenic forest resulted in the regimen shift after recovery, but in the grassland in only temporal decline with following return to the initial state. The root vole showed a delayed population response with the general decline of population in the grassland, and population collapse in the postagrogenic forest. Therefore, the same impact triggered various responses among different species and resulted in different effects in the successional and steady ecosystems.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 57 条
[1]   Seasonal variations of diet composition in farmland field mice Apodemus spp. and bank voles Clethrionomys glareolus [J].
Abt, KF ;
Bock, WF .
ACTA THERIOLOGICA, 1998, 43 (04) :379-389
[2]  
Andreeva E. A., 2021, Tatishchev Readings: Actual Problems of Science and Practice, P228
[3]   Species richness and biomass explain spatial turnover in ecosystem functioning across tropical and temperate ecosystems [J].
Barnes, Andrew D. ;
Weigelt, Patrick ;
Jochum, Malte ;
Ott, David ;
Hodapp, Dorothee ;
Haneda, Noor Farikhah ;
Brose, Ulrich .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2016, 371 (1694)
[4]   Vegetation composition and succession of abandoned farmland: effects of ecological, historical and spatial factors [J].
Benjamin, K ;
Domon, G ;
Bouchard, A .
LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2005, 20 (06) :627-647
[5]   Rising variance: a leading indicator of ecological transition [J].
Carpenter, SR ;
Brock, WA .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2006, 9 (03) :308-315
[6]   Ecology for transformation [J].
Carpenter, Stephen R. ;
Folke, Carl .
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2006, 21 (06) :309-315
[7]  
Churchfield S., 1990, The Natural History of Shrews
[8]   Generic Indicators for Loss of Resilience Before a Tipping Point Leading to Population Collapse [J].
Dai, Lei ;
Vorselen, Daan ;
Korolev, Kirill S. ;
Gore, Jeff .
SCIENCE, 2012, 336 (6085) :1175-1177
[10]  
Emelyanova AA., 2014, Vestn. TVGU. Ser.: Biology and Ecology, V2, P48