CLIMATIC-CHANGE AND ITS ECOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS AT A SUB-ANTARCTIC ISLAND

被引:138
作者
SMITH, VR
STEENKAMP, M
机构
[1] Department of Botany, University of the Orange Free State, Bloemfontein
关键词
Alien biota; Climate change; Nutrient cycling; Primary production; Sub-Antarctic;
D O I
10.1007/BF00317338
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Marion Island (47°S, 38°E) has one of the most oceanic climates on earth, with consistently low air temperatures, high precipitation, constantly high humidity, and low incident radiation. Since 1968 mean surface air temperature has increased significantly, by 0.025° C year-1. This was strongly associated with corresponding changes in sea surface temperature but only weakly, or not at all, with variations in radiation and precipitation. We suggest that changing sealevel (atmospheric and oceanic) circulation patterns in the region underlie all of these changes. Sub-Antarctic terrestrial ecosystems are characterized by being species-poor and having a simple trophic structure. Marion Island is no exception and a scenario is presented of the implications of climatic change for the structure and functioning of its ecosystem. Primary production on the island is high and consequently the vegetation has a large annual requirement for nutrients. There are no macroherbivores and even the insects play only a small role as herbivores, so most of the energy and nutrients incorporated in primary production go through a detritus, rather than grazing, cycle. Ameliorating temperatures and increasing CO2 levels are expected to increase productivity and nutrient demand even further. However, most of the plant communities occur on soils which have especially low available levels of nutrients and nutrient mineralization from organic reserves is the main bottleneck in nutrient cycling and primary production. Increasing temperatures will not significantly enhance microbially-mediated mineralization rates since soil microbiological processes on the island are strongly limited by waterlogging, rather than by temperature. The island supports large numbers of soil macro-arthropods, which are responsible for most of the nutrient release from peat and litter. The activities of these animals are strongly temperature dependent and increasing temperature will result in enhanced nutrient availability, allowing the potential for increased primary production due to elevated temperature and CO2 levels to be realized. However, housemice occur on the island and have an important influence on the ecosystem, mainly by feeding on soil invertebrates. The mouse population is strongly temperature-limited and appears to be increasing, possibly as a result of ameliorating temperatures. We suggest that an increasing mouse population, through enhanced predation pressure on soil invertebrates, will decrease overall rates of nutrient cycling and cause imbalances between primary production and decomposition. This, along with more direct effects of mice (e.g. granivory) has important implications for vegetation succession and ecosystem structure and functioning on the island. Some of these are already apparent from comparisons with nearby Prince Edward Island where mice do not occur. Other implications of climatic change for the island are presented which emphasize the very marked influences that invasive organisms have on ecosystem structure and functioning. We suggest that changing sealevel circulation patterns, by allowing opportunities for colonization by new biota, may have an even more important influence on terrestrial sub-Antarctic ecosystems than is suggested merely on the basis of associated changes in temperature or precipitation. © 1990 Springer-Verlag.
引用
收藏
页码:14 / 24
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Physical Transport Mechanisms Driving Sub-Antarctic Island Marine Ecosystems
    Anne M. Treasure
    James J. Ruzicka
    Evgeny A. Pakhomov
    Isabelle J. Ansorge
    [J]. Ecosystems, 2019, 22 : 1069 - 1087
  • [22] Moisture, carbon and inorganic nutrient controls of soil respiration at a sub-Antarctic island
    Smith, VR
    [J]. SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2005, 37 (01) : 81 - 91
  • [23] Aeolian processes and landforms in the sub-Antarctic: preliminary observations from Marion Island
    Hedding, David W.
    Nel, Werner
    Anderson, Ryan L.
    [J]. POLAR RESEARCH, 2015, 34
  • [24] Petroleum-hydrocarbon contamination and remediation by microbioventing at sub-Antarctic Macquarie Island
    Rayner, John L.
    Snape, Ian
    Walworth, James L.
    Harvey, Paul McA.
    Ferguson, Susan H.
    [J]. COLD REGIONS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2007, 48 (02) : 139 - 153
  • [25] Temperature responses of photosynthesis and respiration in a sub-Antarctic megaherb from Heard Island
    Schortemeyer, Marcus
    Evans, John R.
    Bruhn, Dan
    Bergstrom, Dana M.
    Ball, Marilyn C.
    [J]. FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY, 2015, 42 (06) : 552 - 564
  • [26] EFFECT OF NUTRIENTS ON CO2 ASSIMILATION BY MOSSES ON A SUB-ANTARCTIC ISLAND
    SMITH, VR
    [J]. NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 1993, 123 (04) : 693 - 697
  • [27] Surface destabilisation by the invasive burrowing engineer Mus musculus on a sub-Antarctic island
    Eriksson, Bert
    Eldridge, David J.
    [J]. GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2014, 223 : 61 - 66
  • [28] Ecology and management of invasive plants in the sub-Antarctic and Antarctic regions: evidence and synthesis from Macquarie Island
    Sindel, Brian M.
    Wilson, Susan C.
    Wilson, Brian R.
    Hawking, Kirsten L.
    Zahid, Waqas
    Iqbal, Ali
    Williams, Laura K.
    Knox, Oliver G. G.
    Coleman, Michael J.
    Kristiansen, Paul
    [J]. PLANT ECOLOGY & DIVERSITY, 2022, 15 (5-6) : 183 - 198
  • [29] Statistical models for monitoring and predicting effects of climate change and invasion on the free-living insects and a spider from sub-Antarctic Heard Island
    Kendi F. Davies
    Brett A. Melbourne
    Jeffrey L. McClenahan
    Ty Tuff
    [J]. Polar Biology, 2011, 34 : 119 - 125
  • [30] Statistical models for monitoring and predicting effects of climate change and invasion on the free-living insects and a spider from sub-Antarctic Heard Island
    Davies, Kendi F.
    Melbourne, Brett A.
    McClenahan, Jeffrey L.
    Tuff, Ty
    [J]. POLAR BIOLOGY, 2011, 34 (01) : 119 - 125