4.5 Article

A regionally coherent ecological fingerprint of climate change, evidenced from natural history collections

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 12, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9471

关键词

distribution; ecological change; herbarium; long-term ecology; norway; phenology; warming; zoological collections

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The study in Central Norway found that climate change led to decreased abundances of limnic zooplankton and boreal forest breeding birds, as well as earlier plant flowering. However, species distributions and diversity at the regional scale remained largely stable. Surprisingly, the size of ecological responses did not increase with study duration, and shifts in responses did not coincide with shifts in temperature.
Climate change has dramatic impacts on ecological systems, affecting a range of ecological factors including phenology, species abundance, diversity, and distribution. The breadth of climate change impacts on ecological systems leads to the occurrence of fingerprints of climate change. However, climate fingerprints are usually identified across broad geographical scales and are potentially influenced by publication biases. In this study, we used natural history collections spanning over 250 years, to quantify a range of ecological responses to climate change, including phenology, abundance, diversity, and distributions, across a range of taxa, including vertebrates, invertebrates, plants, and fungi, within a single region, Central Norway. We tested the hypotheses that ecological responses to climate change are apparent and coherent at a regional scale, that longer time series show stronger trends over time and in relation to temperature, and that ecological responses change in trajectory at the same time as shifts in temperature. We identified a clear regional coherence in climate signal, with decreasing abundances of limnic zooplankton (on average by 7691 individuals m(-3) degrees C-1) and boreal forest breeding birds (on average by 1.94 territories km(-2) degrees C-1), and earlier plant flowering phenology (on average 2 days degrees C-1) for every degree of temperature increase. In contrast, regional-scale species distributions and species diversity were largely stable. Surprisingly, the effect size of ecological response did not increase with study duration, and shifts in responses did not occur at the same time as shifts in temperature. This may be as the long-term studies include both periods of warming and temperature stability, and that ecological responses lag behind warming. Our findings demonstrate a regional climate fingerprint across a long timescale. We contend that natural history collections provide a unique window on a broad spectrum of ecological responses at timescales beyond most ecological monitoring programs. Natural history collections are thus an essential source for long-term ecological research.

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