Historical reconstruction unveils the risk of mass mortality and ecosystem collapse during pancontinental megadrought

An important new hypothesis in landscape ecology is that extreme, decade-scale megadroughts can be potent drivers of rapid, macroscale ecosystem degradation and collapse. If true, an increase in such events under climate change could have devastating consequences for global biodiversity. However, be...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2019-07, Vol.116 (31), p.15580-15589
Hauptverfasser: Godfree, Robert C., Knerr, Nunzio, Godfree, Denise, Busby, John, Robertson, Bruce, Encinas-Viso, Francisco
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container_issue 31
container_start_page 15580
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Godfree, Robert C.
Knerr, Nunzio
Godfree, Denise
Busby, John
Robertson, Bruce
Encinas-Viso, Francisco
description An important new hypothesis in landscape ecology is that extreme, decade-scale megadroughts can be potent drivers of rapid, macroscale ecosystem degradation and collapse. If true, an increase in such events under climate change could have devastating consequences for global biodiversity. However, because few megadroughts have occurred in the modern ecological era, the taxonomic breadth, trophic depth, and geographic pattern of these impacts remain unknown. Here we use ecohistorical techniques to quantify the impact of a record, pancontinental megadrought period (1891 to 1903 CE) on the Australian biota. We show that during this event mortality and severe stress was recorded in >45 bird, mammal, fish, reptile, and plant families in arid, semiarid, dry temperate, and Mediterranean ecosystems over at least 2.8 million km² (36%) of the Australian continent. Trophic analysis reveals a bottom-up pattern of mortality concentrated in primary producer, herbivore, and omnivore guilds. Spatial and temporal reconstruction of premortality rainfall shows that mass mortality and synchronous ecosystem-wide collapse emerged in multiple geographic hotspots after 2 to 4 y of severe (>40%) and intensifying rainfall deficits. However, the presence of hyperabundant herbivores significantly increased the sensitivity of ecosystems to overgrazing-induced meltdown and permanent ecosystem change. The unprecedented taxonomic breadth and spatial scale of these impacts demonstrate that continental-scale megadroughts pose a major future threat to global biodiversity, especially in ecosystems affected by intensive agricultural use, trophic simplification, and invasive species.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Agricultural ecosystems
Animals
Aridity
Australia
Biodiversity
Biological Sciences
Biota
Climate change
Collapse
Drought
Droughts - history
Ecosystem
Ecosystem degradation
Environmental changes
Extinction, Biological
Guilds
Herbivores
History, 19th Century
History, 20th Century
Humans
Introduced species
Invasive species
Landscape
Landscape ecology
Models, Biological
Mortality
PNAS Plus
Rainfall
Reconstruction
Reptiles
Taxonomy
title Historical reconstruction unveils the risk of mass mortality and ecosystem collapse during pancontinental megadrought
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