Collaborative Research: LiT: Vulnerability of Tropical Ectotherms to Climate Warming

合作研究:LiT:热带变温动物对气候变暖的脆弱性

基本信息

  • 批准号:
    1038013
  • 负责人:
  • 金额:
    $ 17.77万
  • 依托单位:
  • 依托单位国家:
    美国
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
  • 财政年份:
    2010
  • 资助国家:
    美国
  • 起止时间:
    2010-10-01 至 2015-09-30
  • 项目状态:
    已结题

项目摘要

Biological impacts of climate warming are well documented at mid- to high latitudes, where warming is relatively rapid. However, recent theoretical models predict that tropical coldblooded species (called ectotherms), such as plants, insects, reptiles, fish, are also vulnerable to warming, even though tropical warming is relatively slow. An immediate way to test whether tropical ectotherms are being affected involves comparing current physiological and ecological data with historical data gathered prior to recent warming. Thus, by replicating historical studies, physiological and ecological changes that may have already occurred in parallel with recent climate warming can be detected. Puerto Rico is the ideal venue for such comparisons. In the 1970s and 1980s (prior to recent warming), extensive baseline studies were made of the physiology, reproduction, and ecology of Anolis lizards. No comparable data sets exist for any tropical ectotherm. Puerto Rico has warmed since those baseline studies and is projected to warm more. Simulations predict that these warmer temperatures should have induced heat stress in forest Anolis populations in the summer, but actually increased reproduction during the winter. To test these predictions, baseline study sites will be revisited, and reproductive rates, body and environmental temperatures, and feeding success will be quantified and compared to parallel data collected 25-30 years ago. The investigators who did the original studies will replicate their own studies: thus comparisons between decades will not be influenced by between-investigator differences.Broader impacts of the Research: If these studies document that tropical ectotherms are indeed vulnerable to climate warming, the ecological, agricultural, and economic implications are serious because the tropics are the earth's center of biodiversity and its main engine of primary productivity. In many tropical habitats, reptiles and amphibians are key component of the food web and their loss may precipitate catastrophic changes in tropical communities. The project will provide training in field ecology and physiology to undergraduate and graduate students from five universities or colleges. Under-represented minorities will be recruited from the Universityof Puerto Rico (undergraduates, graduates) and from LaGuardia Community College (NYC), both of which enroll largely minority undergraduate populations. Undergraduate women will be recruited from Barnard College, a women's college. Outreach to pre-college teachers and students will be an important component of the project and will take place through established connections with organizations such as the New York State STEM Initiative, the Ohio State STEM Learning Network, and the American Museum of Natural History. A public symposium at the University of Puerto Rico will enable project researchers, Puerto Rican scientists, and students to interact and share research ideas and results. A new generation of field workers will be mentored: they can potentially replicate these studies in future decades and thus maintain this unique time series of physiological and ecological responses of tropical ectotherms to climate warming.
气候变暖的生物影响在变暖相对迅速的中高纬度地区有充分的记录。然而,最近的理论模型预测,热带冷血物种(称为变温动物),如植物、昆虫、爬行动物、鱼类,也容易受到变暖的影响,尽管热带变暖相对缓慢。测试热带变温动物是否受到影响的一个直接方法是将当前的生理和生态数据与最近变暖之前收集的历史数据进行比较。因此,通过复制历史研究,可以检测到可能与最近气候变暖同时发生的生理和生态变化。波多黎各是进行这种比较的理想场所。在20世纪70年代和80年代(在最近的变暖之前),对蜥蜴的生理、繁殖和生态进行了广泛的基线研究。没有任何热带变温动物的可比数据集。自那些基线研究以来,波多黎各已经变暖,预计会变暖更多。模拟预测,这些较暖的温度本应在夏季引起森林石斛种群的热应激,但实际上在冬季增加了繁殖。为了验证这些预测,将重新访问基线研究地点,并将量化繁殖率、身体和环境温度以及喂养成功率,并将其与25-30年前收集的平行数据进行比较。进行原始研究的研究者将重复他们自己的研究:因此,几十年之间的比较不会受到研究者之间差异的影响。研究的更广泛影响:如果这些研究证明热带变温动物确实容易受到气候变暖的影响,那么生态、农业和经济方面的影响将是严重的,因为热带是地球生物多样性的中心,也是初级生产力的主要引擎。在许多热带栖息地,爬行动物和两栖动物是食物网的关键组成部分,它们的消失可能会导致热带群落的灾难性变化。该项目将为来自五所大学或学院的本科生和研究生提供野外生态学和生理学培训。未被充分代表的少数族裔将从波多黎各大学(本科生和研究生)和拉瓜迪亚社区学院(纽约市)招募,这两所大学都招收了大量的少数族裔本科生。女本科生将从女子学院巴纳德学院(Barnard College)招聘。与大学预科教师和学生的接触将是该项目的重要组成部分,并将通过与纽约州STEM倡议、俄亥俄州STEM学习网络和美国自然历史博物馆等组织建立联系来进行。在波多黎各大学举办的公开研讨会将使项目研究人员、波多黎各科学家和学生能够互动并分享研究想法和成果。新一代的野外工作者将得到指导:他们有可能在未来几十年重复这些研究,从而保持热带变温动物对气候变暖的生理和生态反应的独特时间序列。

项目成果

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Bradford Lister其他文献

Differences among emotionally disturbed children in three treatment and school settings: Discriminant function and multiple regression analysis
三种治疗和学校环境中情绪困扰儿童的差异:判别函数和多元回归分析

Bradford Lister的其他文献

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{{ truncateString('Bradford Lister', 18)}}的其他基金

Assessing, Understanding and Improving the Transfer of Learning in Undergraduate Math, Science and Engineering
评估、理解和改进本科数学、科学和工程的学习迁移
  • 批准号:
    0206952
  • 财政年份:
    2002
  • 资助金额:
    $ 17.77万
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant

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Collaborative Research: Implementation Grant: Leading Inclusive Transformation in Geoscience via an Intercultural Network of Learning Ecosystems - LIT GEO
合作研究:实施资助:通过学习生态系统的跨文化网络引领地球科学的包容性转型 - LIT GEO
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Collaborative Research: Implementation Grant: Leading Inclusive Transformation in Geoscience via an Intercultural Network of Learning Ecosystems - LIT GEO
合作研究:实施资助:通过学习生态系统的跨文化网络引领地球科学的包容性转型 - LIT GEO
  • 批准号:
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合作研究:LiT:环境氧气对美洲短吻鳄生长和生理性能的影响:实验古生理学案例研究
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LIT: Collaborative research: Integrating physiological and genetic mechanisms to understand the evolution of cold tolerance
LIT:合作研究:整合生理和遗传机制来了解耐冷性的进化
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    1051770
  • 财政年份:
    2011
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LIT: Collaborative research: Integrating physiological and genetic mechanisms to understand the evolution of cold tolerance
LIT:合作研究:整合生理和遗传机制来了解耐冷性的进化
  • 批准号:
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Collaborative Research, LiT and MSB: The Changing Diversity and Evolution of Decomposer Fungi in Response to Soil Warming and Nitrogen Additions
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