Long-term shifts in the communities of odonata: effect of chance or climate change?

被引:0
|
作者
Cerini, Francesco [1 ]
Stellati, Luca [1 ]
Luiselli, Luca [2 ]
Vignoli, Leonardo [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Roma Tre, Dept Sci, Viale Marconi 446, I-00146 Rome, Italy
[2] Inst Dev Ecol Conservat & Cooperat, IDECC, Via G Tomasi di Lampedusa 33, I-00144 Rome, Italy
关键词
Climate change; Odonata; global warming; local extinction; community shifts; FRESH-WATER BIODIVERSITY; CONSERVATION; PHENOLOGY; DRAGONFLIES; BUTTERFLIES; MAURITANIA; DIVERSITY; RESPONSES; BIRDS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Global climate change has been causing growing concern among conservationists for its strong implications on biodiversity alteration and loss at different levels of organization. Dragonflies and damselflies (order Odonata) occur in habitats threatened by global warming, thus they represent an ideal model organism to study the correlation patterns of climate change with taxonomic composition and the ecological functioning of communities. We carried out climate and diachronic faunistic analyses of Odonata community changes in three countries (Tunisia, Mauritania, Sweden) to test if the patterns uncovered for single assemblages as a response to local climate change may resist to the generalization across regions and latitudes. Clear climate warming occurred in the analysed regions during the last five decades. We found three main patterns of diachronic shifts in Odonata assemblage species composition based on correlative evidence: i) Generalists are likely advantaged from warming processes that cause the loss of specific habitats (i.e. temporary wetlands, cool lentic waters) and the formation of new or altered habitats suitable for pioneer species (i.e. warm and intermittent pools), whereas specialists are more likely to go toward local extinctions; ii) In Tunisia and Sweden new colonizers expanded northward from their southern distributions; iii)The Odonata communities inhabiting lentic waters are more prone to show species turnover than communities from standing waters. Ow results provide new insights on the possible impact of climate change on Odonata fauna from large areas (i.e. countries) at different latitudes and represent an attempt of a generalization of the effects of climate change on Odonata range shifts and expansions. Despite that Odonata global assessment of conservation status has been completed, insufficient information is available to robustly assess all the main threats affecting their status, and extensive new field surveys are required to test if major changes in fauna composition have occurred during the last decades.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 6
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Effect of Climate Change on Long-term Riverbed Change using GSTARS Model in Nakdong River, Korea
    Ahn, Jungkyu
    Lee, Jong Mun
    Kim, Young Do
    Kang, Boosik
    KSCE JOURNAL OF CIVIL ENGINEERING, 2019, 23 (04) : 1849 - 1859
  • [42] Long-term increases in wing length occur independently of changes in climate and climate-driven shifts in body size
    Dias, Tiffany
    Lemoine, Nathan P.
    Yanco, Scott W.
    Zimova, Marketa
    Bay, Rachel A.
    Weeks, Brian C.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2025, 292 (2039)
  • [43] Long-term effects of climate change on juvenile bull shark migratory patterns
    Matich, Philip
    Plumlee, Jeffrey D.
    Bubley, Walter
    Curtis, Tobey H.
    Drymon, J. Marcus
    Mullins, Lindsay L.
    Shipley, Oliver N.
    Tinhan, Thomas C.
    Fisher, Mark R.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2024, 93 (10) : 1445 - 1461
  • [44] Climate change is linked to long-term decline in a stream salamander
    Lowe, Winsor H.
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2012, 145 (01) : 48 - 53
  • [45] Numerical Simulation of Long-Term Climate Change in East Asia
    汤剑平
    苏炳凯
    赵鸣
    赵得明
    Acta Meteorologica Sinica, 2006, (01) : 50 - 61
  • [46] Climate change impacts on long-term field experiments in Germany
    Donmez, Cenk
    Schmidt, Marcus
    Cilek, Ahmet
    Grosse, Meike
    Paul, Carsten
    Hierold, Wilfried
    Helming, Katharina
    AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS, 2023, 205
  • [47] Endangered Quino checkerspot butterfly and climate change: Short-term success but long-term vulnerability?
    Camille Parmesan
    Alison Williams-Anderson
    Matthew Moskwik
    Alexander S. Mikheyev
    Michael C. Singer
    Journal of Insect Conservation, 2015, 19 : 185 - 204
  • [48] LONG-TERM TRENDS MASK VARIATION IN THE DIRECTION AND MAGNITUDE OF SHORT-TERM PHENOLOGICAL SHIFTS
    Iler, Amy M.
    Hoye, Toke T.
    Inouye, David W.
    Schmidt, Niels M.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2013, 100 (07) : 1398 - 1406
  • [49] Short-term tests validate long-term estimates of climate change
    Palmer, Tim
    NATURE, 2020, 582 (7811) : 185 - 186
  • [50] Long-Term Climate Change Commitment and Reversibility: An EMIC Intercomparison
    Zickfeld, Kirsten
    Eby, Michael
    Weaver, Andrew J.
    Alexander, Kaitlin
    Crespin, Elisabeth
    Edwards, Neil R.
    Eliseev, Alexey V.
    Feulner, Georg
    Fichefet, Thierry
    Forest, Chris E.
    Friedlingstein, Pierre
    Goosse, Hugues
    Holden, Philip B.
    Joos, Fortunat
    Kawamiya, Michio
    Kicklighter, David
    Kienert, Hendrik
    Matsumoto, Katsumi
    Mokhov, Igor I.
    Monier, Erwan
    Olsen, Steffen M.
    Pedersen, Jens O. P.
    Perrette, Mahe
    Philippon-Berthier, Gwenaelle
    Ridgwell, Andy
    Schlosser, Adam
    Von Deimling, Thomas Schneider
    Shaffer, Gary
    Sokolov, Andrei
    Spahni, Renato
    Steinacher, Marco
    Tachiiri, Kaoru
    Tokos, Kathy S.
    Yoshimori, Masakazu
    Zeng, Ning
    Zhao, Fang
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2013, 26 (16) : 5782 - 5809