Disturbances, organisms and ecosystems: a global change perspective

被引:21
|
作者
Ponge, Jean-Francois [1 ]
机构
[1] CNRS, Museum Natl Hist Nat, UMR 7179, F-91800 Brunoy, France
来源
ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION | 2013年 / 3卷 / 04期
关键词
Anticipation; disturbances; ecosystems; evolution; global change; species; LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS; TROPICAL RAIN-FORESTS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SEXUAL SELECTION; MASS EXTINCTION; ECOLOGICAL SPECIALIZATION; HABITAT FRAGMENTATION; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; DENSITY-DEPENDENCE;
D O I
10.1002/ece3.505
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The present text exposes a theory of the role of disturbances in the assemblage and evolution of species within ecosystems, based principally, but not exclusively, on terrestrial ecosystems. Two groups of organisms, doted of contrasted strategies when faced with environmental disturbances, are presented, based on the classical r-K dichotomy, but enriched with more modern concepts from community and evolutionary ecology. Both groups participate in the assembly of known animal, plant, and microbial communities, but with different requirements about environmental fluctuations. The so-called civilized organisms are doted with efficient anticipatory mechanisms, allowing them to optimize from an energetic point of view their performances in a predictable environment (stable or fluctuating cyclically at the scale of life expectancy), and they developed advanced specializations in the course of evolutionary time. On the opposite side, the so-called barbarians are weakly efficient in a stable environment because they waste energy for foraging, growth, and reproduction, but they are well adapted to unpredictably changing conditions, in particular during major ecological crises. Both groups of organisms succeed or alternate each other in the course of spontaneous or geared successional processes, as well as in the course of evolution. The balance of barbarians against civilized strategies within communities is predicted to shift in favor of the first type under present-day anthropic pressure, exemplified among others by climate warming, land use change, pollution, and biological invasions.
引用
收藏
页码:1113 / 1124
页数:12
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