Cargando…

Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland

Possible consequences of climate change in one of the world’s largest wetlands (Ibera, Argentina) were analysed using a multi-scale approach. Climate projections coupled to hydrological models were used to analyse variability in wetland water level throughout the current century. Two potential scena...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Úbeda, Bárbara, Di Giacomo, Adrian S., Neiff, Juan José, Loiselle, Steven A., Guadalupe Poi, Alicia S., Gálvez, José Ángel, Casco, Silvina, Cózar, Andrés
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3706436/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067787
_version_ 1782476560908943360
author Úbeda, Bárbara
Di Giacomo, Adrian S.
Neiff, Juan José
Loiselle, Steven A.
Guadalupe Poi, Alicia S.
Gálvez, José Ángel
Casco, Silvina
Cózar, Andrés
author_facet Úbeda, Bárbara
Di Giacomo, Adrian S.
Neiff, Juan José
Loiselle, Steven A.
Guadalupe Poi, Alicia S.
Gálvez, José Ángel
Casco, Silvina
Cózar, Andrés
author_sort Úbeda, Bárbara
collection PubMed
description Possible consequences of climate change in one of the world’s largest wetlands (Ibera, Argentina) were analysed using a multi-scale approach. Climate projections coupled to hydrological models were used to analyse variability in wetland water level throughout the current century. Two potential scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions were explored, both resulting in an increase in the inter-annual fluctuations of the water level. In the scenario with higher emissions, projections also showed a long-term negative trend in water-level. To explore the possible response of biota to such water-level changes, species-area relationships of flora and aerial censuses of macro-fauna were analysed during an extraordinary dry period. Plant species richness at the basin scale was found to be highly resistant to hydrological changes, as the large dimension of the wetland acts to buffer against the water-level variations. However, local diversity decreased significantly with low water levels, leading to the loss of ecosystem resilience to additional stressors. The analysis of macro-fauna populations suggested that wetland provides refuge, in low water periods, for the animals with high dispersal ability (aquatic and migratory birds). On the contrary, the abundance of animals with low dispersal ability (mainly herbivorous species) was negatively impacted in low water periods, probably because they are required to search for alternative resources beyond the wetland borders. This period of resource scarcity was also related to increased mortality of large mammals (e.g. marsh deer) around water bodies with high anthropogenic enrichment and cyanobacteria dominance. The synergy between recurrent climatic fluctuations and additional stressors (i.e. biological invasions, eutrophication) presents an important challenge to the conservation of neotropical wetlands in the coming decades.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3706436
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37064362013-07-19 Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland Úbeda, Bárbara Di Giacomo, Adrian S. Neiff, Juan José Loiselle, Steven A. Guadalupe Poi, Alicia S. Gálvez, José Ángel Casco, Silvina Cózar, Andrés PLoS One Research Article Possible consequences of climate change in one of the world’s largest wetlands (Ibera, Argentina) were analysed using a multi-scale approach. Climate projections coupled to hydrological models were used to analyse variability in wetland water level throughout the current century. Two potential scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions were explored, both resulting in an increase in the inter-annual fluctuations of the water level. In the scenario with higher emissions, projections also showed a long-term negative trend in water-level. To explore the possible response of biota to such water-level changes, species-area relationships of flora and aerial censuses of macro-fauna were analysed during an extraordinary dry period. Plant species richness at the basin scale was found to be highly resistant to hydrological changes, as the large dimension of the wetland acts to buffer against the water-level variations. However, local diversity decreased significantly with low water levels, leading to the loss of ecosystem resilience to additional stressors. The analysis of macro-fauna populations suggested that wetland provides refuge, in low water periods, for the animals with high dispersal ability (aquatic and migratory birds). On the contrary, the abundance of animals with low dispersal ability (mainly herbivorous species) was negatively impacted in low water periods, probably because they are required to search for alternative resources beyond the wetland borders. This period of resource scarcity was also related to increased mortality of large mammals (e.g. marsh deer) around water bodies with high anthropogenic enrichment and cyanobacteria dominance. The synergy between recurrent climatic fluctuations and additional stressors (i.e. biological invasions, eutrophication) presents an important challenge to the conservation of neotropical wetlands in the coming decades. Public Library of Science 2013-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3706436/ /pubmed/23874446 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067787 Text en © 2013 Úbeda et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Úbeda, Bárbara
Di Giacomo, Adrian S.
Neiff, Juan José
Loiselle, Steven A.
Guadalupe Poi, Alicia S.
Gálvez, José Ángel
Casco, Silvina
Cózar, Andrés
Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland
title Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland
title_full Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland
title_fullStr Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland
title_full_unstemmed Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland
title_short Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Water Level, Flora and Macro-fauna of a Large Neotropical Wetland
title_sort potential effects of climate change on the water level, flora and macro-fauna of a large neotropical wetland
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3706436/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067787
work_keys_str_mv AT ubedabarbara potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland
AT digiacomoadrians potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland
AT neiffjuanjose potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland
AT loisellestevena potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland
AT guadalupepoialicias potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland
AT galvezjoseangel potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland
AT cascosilvina potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland
AT cozarandres potentialeffectsofclimatechangeonthewaterlevelfloraandmacrofaunaofalargeneotropicalwetland