TY - JOUR
T1 - Species interactions and climate change
T2 - How the disruption of species co-occurrence will impact on an avian forest guild
AU - Brambilla, Mattia
AU - Scridel, Davide
AU - Bazzi, Gaia
AU - Ilahiane, Luca
AU - Iemma, Aaron
AU - Pedrini, Paolo
AU - Bassi, Enrico
AU - Bionda, Radames
AU - Marchesi, Luigi
AU - Genero, Fulvio
AU - Teufelbauer, Norbert
AU - Probst, Remo
AU - Vrezec, Al
AU - Kmecl, Primož
AU - Mihelič, Tomaž
AU - Bogliani, Giuseppe
AU - Schmid, Hans
AU - Assandri, Giacomo
AU - Pontarini, Renato
AU - Braunisch, Veronika
AU - Arlettaz, Raphaël
AU - Chamberlain, Dan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
PY - 2020/3/1
Y1 - 2020/3/1
N2 - Interspecific interactions are crucial in determining species occurrence and community assembly. Understanding these interactions is thus essential for correctly predicting species' responses to climate change. We focussed on an avian forest guild of four hole-nesting species with differing sensitivities to climate that show a range of well-understood reciprocal interactions, including facilitation, competition and predation. We modelled the potential distributions of black woodpecker and boreal, tawny and Ural owl, and tested whether the spatial patterns of the more widespread species (excluding Ural owl) were shaped by interspecific interactions. We then modelled the potential future distributions of all four species, evaluating how the predicted changes will alter the overlap between the species' ranges, and hence the spatial outcomes of interactions. Forest cover/type and climate were important determinants of habitat suitability for all species. Field data analysed with N-mixture models revealed effects of interspecific interactions on current species abundance, especially in boreal owl (positive effects of black woodpecker, negative effects of tawny owl). Climate change will impact the assemblage both at species and guild levels, as the potential area of range overlap, relevant for species interactions, will change in both proportion and extent in the future. Boreal owl, the most climate-sensitive species in the guild, will retreat, and the range overlap with its main predator, tawny owl, will increase in the remaining suitable area: climate change will thus impact on boreal owl both directly and indirectly. Climate change will cause the geographical alteration or disruption of species interaction networks, with different consequences for the species belonging to the guild and a likely spatial increase of competition and/or intraguild predation. Our work shows significant interactions and important potential changes in the overlap of areas suitable for the interacting species, which reinforce the importance of including relevant biotic interactions in predictive climate change models for increasing forecast accuracy.
AB - Interspecific interactions are crucial in determining species occurrence and community assembly. Understanding these interactions is thus essential for correctly predicting species' responses to climate change. We focussed on an avian forest guild of four hole-nesting species with differing sensitivities to climate that show a range of well-understood reciprocal interactions, including facilitation, competition and predation. We modelled the potential distributions of black woodpecker and boreal, tawny and Ural owl, and tested whether the spatial patterns of the more widespread species (excluding Ural owl) were shaped by interspecific interactions. We then modelled the potential future distributions of all four species, evaluating how the predicted changes will alter the overlap between the species' ranges, and hence the spatial outcomes of interactions. Forest cover/type and climate were important determinants of habitat suitability for all species. Field data analysed with N-mixture models revealed effects of interspecific interactions on current species abundance, especially in boreal owl (positive effects of black woodpecker, negative effects of tawny owl). Climate change will impact the assemblage both at species and guild levels, as the potential area of range overlap, relevant for species interactions, will change in both proportion and extent in the future. Boreal owl, the most climate-sensitive species in the guild, will retreat, and the range overlap with its main predator, tawny owl, will increase in the remaining suitable area: climate change will thus impact on boreal owl both directly and indirectly. Climate change will cause the geographical alteration or disruption of species interaction networks, with different consequences for the species belonging to the guild and a likely spatial increase of competition and/or intraguild predation. Our work shows significant interactions and important potential changes in the overlap of areas suitable for the interacting species, which reinforce the importance of including relevant biotic interactions in predictive climate change models for increasing forecast accuracy.
KW - SDM
KW - biotic interactions
KW - citizen science
KW - global warming
KW - owls
KW - woodpeckers
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078604834&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/gcb.14953
DO - 10.1111/gcb.14953
M3 - Article
SN - 1354-1013
VL - 26
SP - 1212
EP - 1224
JO - Global Change Biology
JF - Global Change Biology
IS - 3
ER -