4.8 Article

Climate-associated decline of body condition in a fossorial salamander

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 28, 期 5, 页码 1725-1739

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15766

关键词

Ambystoma maculatum; body condition; climate change; ecophysiology; metabolic rate; microhabitat; phenology; reproduction

资金

  1. Ontario Parks
  2. Town of Huntsville Environmental Research Bursary
  3. Centre for Global Change Science at the University of Toronto
  4. Beatrice and Arthur Minden Graduate Research Fellowship at the University of Toronto School of the Environment
  5. CGS-D award from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  6. NSERC [NSERC RGPIN-05814, RGPIN-2016-06469]
  7. Connaught Early Career Award
  8. Faculty of Arts and Science, University of Toronto

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that in a northern population of fossorial salamanders in Canada, breeding body condition declined with warmer summer and autumn temperatures, and population-level reproduction was weakly influenced by autumn temperatures. Salamander breeding phenology was mainly correlated with lake ice melt, with no long-term temporal trend observed. Climate warming in the region is predicted to lead to a decline in salamander body condition, highlighting the sensitivity of fossorial salamanders to a warming climate.
Temperate ectotherms have responded to recent environmental change, likely due to the direct and indirect effects of temperature on key life cycle events. Yet, a substantial number of ectotherms are fossorial, spending the vast majority of their lives in subterranean microhabitats that are assumed to be buffered against environmental change. Here, we examine whether seasonal climatic conditions influence body condition (a measure of general health and vigor), reproductive output, and breeding phenology in a northern population of fossorial salamander (Spotted Salamander, Ambystoma maculatum). We found that breeding body condition declined over a 12-year monitoring period (2008-2019) with warmer summer and autumn temperatures at least partly responsible for the observed decline in body condition. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that elevated metabolism drives the negative association between temperature and condition. Population-level reproduction, assessed via egg mass counts, showed high interannual variation and was weakly influenced by autumn temperatures. Salamander breeding phenology was strongly correlated with lake ice melt but showed no long-term temporal trend (1986-2019). Climatic warming in the region, which has been and is forecasted to be strongest in the summer and autumn, is predicted to lead to a 5%-27% decline in salamander body condition under realistic near-future climate scenarios. Although the subterranean environment offers a thermal buffer, the observed decline in condition and relatively strong effect of summer temperature on body condition suggest that fossorial salamanders are sensitive to the effects of a warming climate. Given the diversity of fossorial taxa, heightened attention to the vulnerability of subterranean microhabitat refugia and their inhabitants is warranted amid global climatic change.

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