A global meta-analysis reveals multilevel and context-dependent effects of climate change on subterranean ecosystems
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2023
abstract:
Subterranean ecosystems (e.g., caves, groundwaters, fissure systems) are often overlooked in global climate change and conservation agendas. This contrasts with their widespread distribution, rich biodiversity, and importance to humans as providers of multiple ecosystem services. Worryingly, evidence is accumulating regarding diverse biological alterations in subterranean ecosystems under climate change exposure. Yet, we lack quantification of the magnitude of these impacts across scales and ecosystem components. Here, we assembled a dataset covering 347 measurements of climate change impact at the organismal physiology, behavior, population/community, and habitat levels. Through a meta-analysis, we showed that climate change effects act at gene to community levels with varying strength and direction depending on habitat, taxa, and degree of subterranean specialization. By building a nuanced understanding of the multilevel impacts of climate change on subterranean ecosystems, our analysis underscores the vulnerability of different ecosystem components, providing a supported rationale for their incorporation into conservation agendas through targeted measures.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
caves; climate refugium; extinction risk; global warming; groundwater; habitat shift; relative humidity; stenothermal; stress response; subterranean biology
List of contributors:
DI LORENZO, Tiziana; Mammola, Stefano
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