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美国卫生研究院文献>Ecology and Evolution
>Arthropod Food Webs in the Foreland of a Retreating Greenland Glacier: Integrating Molecular Gut Content Analysis With Structural Equation Modelling
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Arthropod Food Webs in the Foreland of a Retreating Greenland Glacier: Integrating Molecular Gut Content Analysis With Structural Equation Modelling
The Arctic has warmed nearly four times faster than the global average since 1979, resulting in rapid glacier retreat and exposing new glacier forelands. These forelands offer unique experimental settings to explore how global warming impacts ecosystems, particularly for highly climate‐sensitive arthropods. Understanding these impacts can help anticipate future biodiversity and ecosystem changes under ongoing warming scenarios. In this study, we integrate data on arthropod diversity from DNA gut content analysis—offering insight into predator diets—with quantitative measures of arthropod activity‐density at a Greenland glacier foreland using Structural Equation Modelling (SEM). Our SEM analysis reveals both bottom‐up and top‐down controlled food chains. Bottom‐up control, linked to sit‐and‐wait predator behavior, was prominent for spider and harvestman populations, while top‐down control, associated with active search behavior, was key for ground beetle populations. Bottom‐up controlled dynamics predominated during the early stages of vegetation succession, while top‐down mechanisms dominated in later successional stages further from the glacier, driven largely by increasing temperatures. In advanced successional stages, top‐down cascades intensify intraguild predation (IGP) among arthropod predators. This is especially evident in the linyphiid spider Collinsia holmgreni, whose diet included other linyphiid and lycosid spiders, reflecting high IGP. The IGP ratio in C. holmgreni negatively correlated with the activity‐density of ground‐dwelling prey, likely contributing to the local decline and possible extinction of this cold‐adapted species in warmer, late‐succession habitats where lycosid spiders dominate. These findings suggest that sustained warming and associated shifts in food web dynamics could lead to the loss of cold‐adapted species, while brief warm events may temporarily impact populations without lasting extinction effects.
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机译:自 1979 年以来,北极的变暖速度几乎是全球平均水平的四倍,导致冰川迅速退缩并露出新的冰川前地。这些前地为探索全球变暖如何影响生态系统提供了独特的实验环境,特别是对于高度气候敏感的节肢动物。了解这些影响有助于预测在持续变暖情景下未来的生物多样性和生态系统变化。在这项研究中,我们将来自 DNA 肠道内容分析的节肢动物多样性数据整合在一起——提供对捕食者饮食的见解——并使用结构方程模型 (SEM) 对格陵兰冰川前陆节肢动物活动密度的定量测量。我们的 SEM 分析揭示了自下而上和自上而下受控的食物链。与坐着等待的捕食者行为相关的自下而上的控制在蜘蛛和收割者种群中很突出,而与主动搜索行为相关的自上而下的控制是地面甲虫种群的关键。在植被演替的早期阶段,自下而上的控制动力学占主导地位,而在远离冰川的后期演替阶段,自上而下的机制占主导地位,这主要是由温度升高驱动的。在晚期演替阶段,自上而下的级联反应加剧了节肢动物捕食者之间的公会内捕食 (IGP)。这在 linyphiid 蜘蛛 Collinsia holmgreni 中尤为明显,其饮食包括其他 linyphiid 和 lycosid 蜘蛛,反映了高 IGP。以 C 为单位的 IGP 比率。Holmgreni 与地栖猎物的活动密度呈负相关,可能导致这种适应寒冷的物种在石蒜蜘蛛占主导地位的温暖、后期演替栖息地的局部衰落和可能灭绝。这些发现表明,持续变暖和食物网动态的相关变化可能导致适应寒冷的物种的丧失,而短暂的温暖事件可能会暂时影响种群,而不会产生持久的灭绝影响。
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