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首页> 外文期刊>Global change biology >Forecasting the effects of global change scenarios on bioaccumulation patterns in great lakes species.
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Forecasting the effects of global change scenarios on bioaccumulation patterns in great lakes species.

机译:预测全球变化情景对大湖泊物种生物富集模式的影响。

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Climate change will have substantial impacts on biodiversity, particularly for aquatic species. Warming temperatures and changing weather patterns will also remobilize and modify chemical partitioning. Holding millions of cubic yards of sediments contaminated with persistent legacy chemicals such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and dioxins, the Laurentian Great Lakes are a laboratory for observing interactions between biological and chemical responses to climate change. They provide a wide range of habitat to a variety of species, from littoral forage fish to deep-water predators. In this paper, we couple bioenergetic and bioaccumulation models to investigate the biological and chemical effects of climate change in the Great Lakes. We consider three species: round goby, a warm-water invasive forage fish; mottled sculpin, a cool-water native forage fish; and lake trout, a cold-water native predator. Using our coupled models, we calculate the accumulation of a representative persistent chemical, PCB-77, under four climate scenarios for Lake Erie and Lake Superior. Predator-prey (lake trout-round goby) interactions and food availability (high-low) are incorporated into our simulations. For cool- to cold-water species (sculpin, lake trout) we find that warm temperatures limit growth. For warm-water species (round goby) cold temperatures limit growth. The impact of climate warming on growth depends on the winter lows as well as the summer highs of the scenario, in combination with the species' critical upper and lower thermal limits. We find conditions for high growth and consumption rates generally lead to high bioaccumulation. However, this can be confounded by predator-prey dynamics, as mismatches in the temperature preferences of predator and prey can lead to mismatches in relative growth and uptake rates. As predator-prey dynamics are expected to undergo substantial shifts with changing climate, these relative thermal sensitivities will be key in determining the implications of climate change for bioaccumulation, particularly in top predator species.Digital Object Identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02299.x
机译:气候变化将对生物多样性,特别是对水生物种产生重大影响。变暖的温度和变化的天气模式也将重新分配和改变化学物质的分配。劳伦大湖区拥有数百万立方码的沉积物,这些沉积物被持久性的传统化学物质(如多氯联苯和二恶英)污染,是观察生物和化学对气候变化反应之间相互作用的实验室。它们为从沿海觅食鱼到深水捕食者的各种物种提供了广泛的栖息地。在本文中,我们结合生物能和生物蓄积模型来研究大湖区气候变化的生物和化学影响。我们考虑三种:圆虾虎鱼,温水入侵饲料鱼;斑驳的s鱼,一种凉水的天然饲料鱼;和湖鳟鱼,一种冷水原生捕食者。使用我们的耦合模型,我们计算了在四种气候情景下伊利湖和苏必利尔湖的代表性持久性化学品PCB-77的累积量。捕食者-猎物(鳟鱼-轮虾)的相互作用和食物的可获得性(高-低)被纳入我们的模拟中。对于冷水到冷水物种(杜鹃,湖鳟),我们发现温暖的温度会限制生长。对于温水物种(虾虎鱼),低温限制了生长。气候变暖对生长的影响取决于情景的冬季低点和夏季高点,以及该物种的临界热上限和下限。我们发现高增长的条件和消耗率通常会导致高生物蓄积。但是,这可能会与捕食者-猎物的动态联系在一起,因为捕食者和猎物的温度偏好不匹配会导致相对生长和吸收率不匹配。由于预计捕食者-猎物的动力学会随着气候变化而发生重大变化,因此这些相对热敏感性将是确定气候变化对生物蓄积的影响的关键,特别是在顶级捕食者物种中。数字对象标识符http://dx.doi.org /10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02299.x

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