论文标题
物种对气候变化的反应的机理预测:生物物理生态学的希望
Mechanistic forecasts of species responses to climate change: the promise of biophysical ecology
论文作者
论文摘要
全球变化生物学的挑战是预测物种将如何响应未来的环境变化并管理这些反应。为了对新颖的未来做出这样的预测和管理行动,我们需要准确地表征生物如何体验其环境以及它们反应的生物学机制。所有生物都通过在细小的空间和时间尺度上交换热量和水,可以热力学地连接到它们的环境,并且可以使用生物物理模型来捕获这种交换。尽管基于生物物理生态学的机械模型具有悠久的开发和应用历史,但尽管它们巨大的希望和越来越容易访问的软件,但它们在全球变化生物学中的使用仍然有限。我们认为,在生物物理模型的理论和方法中的更了解和培训对于扩大其应用至关重要。我们的综述表明,如何实施生物物理模型来理解和预测气候变化对物种行为,物候,生存,分布和丰度的影响。我们说明了可以生成的输出类型以及不同实现所需的数据输入。示例范围从简单的计算到基于预计能量和水平衡的物种分布限制的更复杂的分析,从而考虑了行为和物候。我们概述了目前限制生物物理模型广泛应用的挑战。我们讨论了进步和未来的发展,这些发展可以使这些模型可以应用于大型空间范围和时间范围的许多物种。我们强调了生物物理模型如何唯一适合解决全球变化生物学问题,这些问题涉及预测和解释对环境变异性和极端,多个或转移约束以及新颖的非生物或生物环境的反应。
A challenge in global change biology is to predict how species will respond to future environmental change and to manage these responses. To make such predictions and management actions robust to novel futures, we need to accurately characterize how organisms experience their environments and the biological mechanisms by which they respond. All organisms are thermodynamically connected to their environments through the exchange of heat and water at fine spatial and temporal scales and this exchange can be captured with biophysical models. Although mechanistic models based on biophysical ecology have a long history of development and application, their use in global change biology remains limited despite their enormous promise and increasingly accessible software. We contend that greater understanding and training in the theory and methods of biophysical models is vital to expand their application. Our review shows how biophysical models can be implemented to understand and predict climate change impacts on species' behavior, phenology, survival, distribution, and abundance. We illustrate the types of outputs that can be generated, and the data inputs required for different implementations. Examples range from simple calculations of body temperature to more complex analyses of species' distribution limits based on projected energy and water balances, accounting for behavior and phenology. We outline challenges that currently limit the widespread application of biophysical models. We discuss progress and future developments that could allow these models to be applied to many species across large spatial extents and timeframes. We highlight how biophysical models are uniquely suited to solve global change biology problems that involve predicting and interpreting responses to environmental variability and extremes, multiple or shifting constraints, and novel abiotic or biotic environments.