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Stressresistenz verschiedener Entwicklungsstadien bei Tagfaltern unter dem Einfluss des Klimawandels
(2016)
Der anthropogene Klimawandel stellt für die Erhaltung der biologischen Vielfalt eine erhebliche Herausforderung dar. Dokumentierte biologische Reaktionen auf den jüngsten Klimawandel beinhalten phänologische und Verbreitungs-Verschiebungen sowie Abnahmen von an Kälte angepassten und Zunahmen von an Wärme angepassten Arten. Letzteres zeigt, dass einige Arten unter den sich ändernden Bedingungen leiden werden, während andere davon profitieren können. Welche spezifischen biologischen Eigenschaften darüber bestimmen, ob eine bestimmte Art ein „Gewinnen“ oder „Verlierer“ des Klimawandels sein wird, ist bis jetzt jedoch weitgehend unbekannt. Diese Dissertation untersuchte im ersten Experiment bei dem tropischen Schmetterling Bicyclus anynana welches Entwicklungsstadium am empfindlichsten auf Hitzestress reagiert. Ich konnte zeigen, dass Entwicklungsstadien deutlich in ihrer Hitzetoleranz variierten und Eier die höchste Anfälligkeit gegenüber Hitze zeigten. Auffällig war, dass die meisten Veränderungen in der Hitzetoleranz durch Unterschiede in der Körpermasse erklärt werden konnten, was somit zukünftig Einschränkungen in der Anpassungsfähigkeit mit sich bringen könnte. Ich schließe daraus, dass das Überleben der Arten unter dem Einfluss des Klimawandels vermutlich von anderen als dem auffälligen Imaginalstadium abhängt. Im zweiten Experiment habe ich die Stresstoleranz (Hitze und Trockenheit) während der frühen Entwicklung, bei drei verwandten Schmetterlingsarten mit unterschiedlichen Anfälligkeiten gegenüber dem Klimawandel, untersucht. Diese Arten sind Lycaena tityrus, L. dispar und L. helle. Die am meisten gefährdete Art (L. helle) zeigte den stärksten Rückgang des Schlupferfolges unter Hitze- und Trockenstress. Ich konnte darlegen, dass die Stresstoleranz während der frühen Entwicklung von entscheidender Bedeutung für das Überleben der Arten unter dem Einfluss des Klimawandels sein kann. Das dritte Experiment untersuchte die Reaktionen auf simulierte Hitzewellen während der Larven- und Puppenentwicklung und die daraus resultierenden Fitnessimplikationen für Lycaena tityrus, L. dispar und L. helle. Obwohl sich die Arten signifikant in ihren Reaktionen in den Versuchsgruppen unterschieden, scheint eine solche Variation weitgehend durch Selektionsdrücke, die mit den spezifischen Entwicklungswegen assoziiert sind, bestimmt zu sein. Ich fand heraus, dass die simulierten Hitzewellen nur geringe Auswirkungen auf Fitness-Komponenten, einschließlich des Fettgehalts und der Immunfunktion, hatten. Folglich scheinen alle drei Arten in der Lage zu sein, mit den projizierten Veränderungen während ihrer Larven- und Puppenentwicklung zurechtzukommen. Studie 4 verglich die Plastizität in der Stresstoleranz im adulten Stadium in diesen drei Feuerfalterarten. Die phänotypische Plastizität ist die erste Verteidigungslinie gegen Umweltveränderungen und kann für das Überleben von Arten unter dem Einfluss des Klimawandels von großer Bedeutung sein. Im Gegensatz zu meinen Vorhersagen zeigten die drei untersuchten Arten keine ausgeprägte Variation der Stressresistenz, obwohl sich die plastischen Kapazitäten in der Temperaturstressresistenz unterschieden. Insgesamt schienen meine Ergebnisse eher die Populations- als die Art-spezifischen Muster wiederzugeben. Experiment 5 untersuchte mögliche Unterschiede in den direkten und indirekten Entwicklungswegen von L. tityrus. Wie im vierten Experiment fand ich dabei keinen Hinweis auf negative Auswirkungen erhöhter Temperaturen und Hitzewellen. Darüber hinaus unterschieden sich die Muster nicht zwischen sich direkt und vermutlich mehr zeitlich beschränkten sich indirekt entwickelnden Individuen. Ich vermute, dass Art-spezifische Eigenschaften wichtiger sein könnten als potenzielle zeitliche Beschränkungen. Die letzte Studie wurde durchgeführt, um die Auswirkungen der veränderten Winterbedingungen auf das Überleben von L. tityrus zu testen. Ich fand heraus, dass wärmere und feuchtere Winterbedingungen die Überlebensraten deutlich verminderten. Diese negativen Auswirkungen beschränkten sich jedoch auf das Überleben während der Diapause und hatten keinen messbaren Effekt für die spätere individuelle Fitness der Falter. Ich gehe davon aus, dass die Überwinterung ein wichtiger Faktor für die Anfälligkeit gegenüber dem Klimawandel ist. Um das Schicksal bestimmter Arten und Populationen unter dem voranschreitenden Klimawandel vorherzusagen, müssen zwingend mehr Daten zur Stresstoleranz in verschiedenen Entwicklungsstadien, aus einem möglichst breiten Spektrum von Arten, zusammengetragen werden.
Weltweit nimmt der Druck auf die natürlichen Wasserressourcen zu. Dies hat unterschiedliche Gründe, ist jedoch zum größten Teil verursacht durch einen stetig ansteigenden Bedarf. Faktoren wie Bevölkerungswachstum, die In- und Extensivierung landwirtschaftlicher Produktion, veränderte Lebensstile mit gleichzeitiger Erhöhung des individuellen Wasserverbrauchs, tragen regional unterschiedlich zu einer Verknappung bei. Neben dem anthropogenem Einfluss auf Wasserressourcen stellt Klimawandel ein zusätzliches Problem dar. Viele Länder sind sich der begrenzten Verfügbarkeit ihrer Ressourcen zwar bewusst, einfache Lösungen zur nachhaltigen Bewältigung des steigenden Bedarfs existieren jedoch zumeist nicht. Momentan folgen die meisten Länder dem Paradigma des ökonomischen Wachstums, um Ernährungssicherheit, Beschäftigung und sozialen Fortschritt zu gewährleisten. Die exzessive Ausbeutung natürlicher Ressourcen stellt immer noch den Standard dar, um sozio-ökonomische Entwicklung zu ermöglichen. Daher ist bei der Vereinbarung von ökonomischem Wachstum und Umweltnachhaltigkeit nur schwer ein Fortschritt zu erkennen. In diesem Zusammenhang spielt Wasser eine Schlüsselrolle: der Zugang zu und die Nutzung von Wasser war und ist eine wesentliche Voraussetzung für sozio-ökonomische Entwicklung. In den vergangenen Jahrzehnten wurden kritische Wasserlimits trotz wachsenden Bedarfs überschritten. Demnach mangelt es in vielen Ländern an einem angepassten Wassermanagement. Zudem sind Maßnahmen zum Schutz der Wasserressourcen insbesondere im Hinblick auf eine zukünftige Nutzung unzureichend. Nord-Afrika ist eine Region mit schwerwiegenden Problemen bezüglich ausreichender Wasserverfügbarkeit. Die Übernutzung hat bereits zu einem alarmierenden Rückgang vorhandener Frischwasserressourcen geführt. Wasser ist aber gleichermaßen die Schlüsselressource für ökonomisches Wachstum und sozio-ökonomische Entwicklung. Daher ist die Implementierung einer adäquaten Wasserbedarfsteuerung unentbehrlich. Der thematische Fokus dieser Dissertation liegt auf der Analyse der problematischen Wassersituation im nordöstlichen Marokko. In der Region sind Wasserressourcen in hohem Maße vulnerabel durch einen stetig steigenden Bedarf. Dieser ist verursacht durch Bevölkerungswachstum, hohen landwirtschaftlichen Bewässerungsbedarf sowie durch die jüngst erfolgte Etablierung eines wasser-intensiven Tourismussektors. Zusätzlich wirkt sich Klimawandel auf die bereits übernutzten Ressourcen aus. Der momentane Mangel an angepassten Strategien als Antwort auf die Herausforderungen eines steigenden Bedarfs verstärkt durch Klimawandel hat negative Auswirkungen auf die regional angestrebte sozio-ökonomische Entwicklung. Diese Dissertation untersucht die Gründe einer sich verringernden regionalen Wasserverfügbarkeit unter Einbeziehung des menschlichen sowie des klimatischen Einflusses auf das Wasserbudget. Die regionale Ökonomie hängt ab von der ausreichender Wasserverfügbarkeit. Wasserpolitiken sind daher wichtig und sollten die Ursachen der Wasserprobleme realistisch betrachten. Der räumliche Rahmen vorliegender Analyse ist das Einzugsgebiet des Moulouya-Flusses. Dieses stellt eine hydrologische Einheit dar, und umfasst ca. 54.000 km2. Der Fluss selbst hat eine Länge von ca. 600 km und mündet in einem Delta mit einzigartigen Feuchtgebieten an der Küste des Mittelmeers. Der Moulouya-Fluss ist der wichtigste Frischwasserversorger der gesamten nordöstlichen Landesregion. Mit einer jährlichen Niederschlagsumme von ca. 330 mm gehört die Region zu den trockensten des Landes. Ein Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit ist es, Forschungslücken zu füllen und Information bereitzustellen, die Zusammenhänge der Exponiertheit gegenüber Wasserstress verdeutlichen können. Zudem soll die Etablierung eines verbesserten Wassermanagements als Grundlage sozio-ökonomischer Entwicklung unterstützt werden. In einer interdisziplinären Herangehensweise wird Wasserknappheit in der Region empirisch analysiert. In vier wissenschaftlichen Artikeln werden die Gründe und das Ausmaß von Vulnerabilität sowie der Entwicklungs-Governance-Kontext im Hinblick auf Wasserknappheit untersucht. Artikel I erörtert die spezifischen regionalen Probleme der Küstenzone, die sich unter starkem Entwicklungsdruck befindet und die Auswirkungen des Klimawandels bereits spürt. Artikel II kontrastiert den menschlichen Einfluss auf Frischwasserverfügbarkeit (Indikatoren: Bevölkerungswachstum, Wassernachfrage) mit den möglichen Auswirkungen einer regionalen Klimaveränderung (Indikatoren: Niederschlag, Temperaturen, Evapotranspiration). Artikel III analysiert den zusätzlichen Wasserbedarf in Nord-Ost-Marokko, der durch die Etablierung von Luxustourismusresorts entsteht, die in der Küstenzone errichtet werden. Artikel IV diskutiert die Nachhaltigkeit der regionalen Entwicklungspläne im Lichte des Wasserproblems. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Wassernachfrage die Wasserverfügbarkeit bereits überschritten hat. Bevölkerungswachstum und wasserbasierte ökonomische Entwicklung werden diesen Trend verstärken, so dass die Region mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit unter problematischen Wassermangel leiden wird. Die Analysen regionaler Klimatrends deuten hin auf eine Verschiebung der Niederschlagsmuster bei gleichzeitigem Rückgang der Niederschlagssummen. In Verbindung mit den aktuellen Nachfrageraten ist die Verfügbarkeitsgrenze bereits überschritten. Regierungspläne, die den Ausbau des Luxustourismus fördern, haben zum Ziel, die regionale Ökonomie zu diversifizieren und die Abhängigkeit vom Agrarsektor zu reduzieren. Luxustourismus ist allerdings auf permanente Wasserversorgung angewiesen und wird dadurch eine zusätzliche Belastung für die regionale Wasserverfügbarkeit darstellen. Alle vier Artikel betonen die Notwendigkeit für rasche soziale und institutionelle Antworten auf die beschriebenen Herausforderungen, um die Wasserversorgung zu gewährleisten. Daher werden folgende Empfehlungen formuliert: • Erhöhung der Wassereffizienz (z.B. durch modernisierte Bewässerungstechnologien, “green water management” für regenwasser-gespeiste Bewässerung); • Etablierung moderner Wassertechnologien zum Wasserschutz, oder unkonventioneller Wasserproduktion); • Etablierung urbaner und ländlicher Abwassersammlung und –behandlung, sowie Wiederverwertung; • Einbeziehung von Klimawandel in Berechnungen des zukünftigen Wasserbudgets; • Aufbau von kleinskaligen Wasseraufbereitungsanlagen für wasserintensive Unternehmen, z.B. Tourismusinfrastrukturen. Derartige Maßnahmen sind kostenintensiv. Dennoch ist es das Ziel dieser Dissertation zu betonen, dass natürliche Wasservorräte begrenzt und in Nord-Ost-Marokko bereits stark degradiert sind. Ein besseres Verständnis der jeweiligen Einflussfaktoren, anthropogen oder klimatisch verursacht, ist die Basis für die Implementation problem-ausgerichteter Anpassungsstrategien. Anthropogen verursachte Auswirkungen können durch Politiken beeinflusst werden. Wenn wasserbasierte Volkswirtschaften nicht adäquat auf den zunehmenden Druck auf Wasserressourcen reagieren, riskieren sie ökonomisches Scheitern.
Abstract: The Arctic has experienced a pronounced increase in air temperature over the last four decades, with an average increase of 0.4 °C per decade and thus an increase of almost the double rate than that of temperate regions. Remote sensing studies and repeat photography of historical images have shown large-scale increases of plant productivity in tundra ecosystems over the same time period. A pronounced size, abundance and biomass increase of shrubs has been observed. This so called shrub expansion has important repercussions for the vegetation, the animals, the soil, the energy and the carbon balance of the Arctic tundra and on regional and global climate. As the comparison of historical photographs with recent photographs has shown, this shrub expansion occurs on different temporal and spatial scales with areas of strong increase in shrub cover (expanding patches) and areas without noticeable changes in shrub vegetation (stable patches). While remote sensing approaches for the detection of changes in vegetation are limited in their temporal coverage and so far also in their resolution, historical photographs with high resolution are often not available. Experimental studies have shown that an increase in nutrients or temperature often resulted in increased shrub biomass, but findings were partly contradictory, referred to short term observations and usually confined to small areas. To bridge the gap between spatially limited plot-scale experiments and global large-scale assessment of plant productivity by satellite derived pictures, dendrochronology was used in this thesis to analyze the drivers for and the rate of shrub growth of different widespread evergreen and deciduous shrub species in alpine and arctic tundra and to reconstruct historic environmental conditions. In detail, this doctoral thesis was conducted to study shrub growth and to assess the applicability of traditional dendrochronological methods on shrubs that had been so far mainly applied to trees and to test whether shrubs differed morphologically from trees. Further, I was determined to look for evidence for a possible Scandinavian shrub range expansion and to assess which climatic factors – temperature, precipitation or snow – influenced shrub growth significantly. Moreover, we aimed to find the reason for the observed heterogeneity of the shrub expansion on the landscape and its relevance for the three most common shrubs on the Alaskan tundra. The methods applied followed the routines usually applied for dendrochronological analyses of treerings, with the exception that usually several stem discs of the main stem were analyzed and frequently had to be prepared with help of a microtome as thin-sections, that were stained and sealed on a coverglass before annual shrubrings were measured. The averaged shrubring widths were then compared with environmental factors through correlation and regression methods. This thesis gives first a general introduction to climate change in the Arctic, shrub expansion on the tundra, the scientific discipline of dendrochronology or -ecology on shrubs and its development, the main research questions and the thesis outline. Then seven research papers are presented and the main results and conclusions are synthesized and discussed and finally possible venues of future research are outlined. The most important insights gained from this thesis are the following: I) Dendroecological methods can be applied to shrubs. Insights into shrub morphology have been gained by detecting an interesting mechanism for coping with adverse environmental conditions of both, trees and shrubs that can save resources by confining the production of wood to the upper parts of the stem. II) Further, I found evidence for a shrub expansion in Scandinavia. III) I could establish the causal link between the current climate warming and increased radial and vertical shrub growth by identifying summer temperature as main driver for shrub growth. IV) Results from the Alaskan tundra indicate a strongly adverse role of snow for shrub growth in stable patches, refuting the popular snow-shrub-microbe hypothesis for this extensive area across species. The differing influence of snow is likely linked to the presence of permafrost and shallow active layers and the snow’s contribution to moist or even anoxic conditions in Alaska. V) Furthermore, we found that the different rates and the spatial heterogeneity of shrub expansion are accompanied by strong differences in the surrounding vegetation composition and the soil parameters of expanding (accustomed to more favorable conditions) and stable shrub patches. VI) These differences are predisposed by shrub patch position within the landscape, comprising different levels and rates of disturbance. VII) Additionally, shrub ring records were successfully used as natural archives to model past temperature dynamics respectively summer glacier mass balance with high accuracy. VIII) Finally, a synthesis of the climate-growth relationships of shrubs of more than 25 sites around the Arctic as joined effort together with other leading shrub researchers supports the presence of a circumpolar shrub expansion, gives recommendations for methods used in shrub dendroecology and lays out future research directions. The findings of my dissertation research show that the analysis of shrubs by dendroecological methods yields highly interesting results, and they greatly improved our understanding of factors that influence individual shrub growth, the reconstruction of earlier environmental conditions as well as the reconstruction and assessment of plant population dynamics.
Relative importance of plastic and genetic responses to weather conditions in long-lived bats
(2022)
In the light of the accelerating pace of environmental change, it is imperative to understand how populations and species can adapt to altered environmental conditions. This is a crucial step in predicting current and future population persistence and limits thereof. Genetic adaption and phenotypic plasticity are two main mechanisms that can mediate the process of adaptation and are of particular importance for non-dispersing species. While phenotypic plasticity may enable individuals to cope with short term environmental changes, genetic adaptation will often be required for populations to survive in situ over longer time spans. However, a rapid genetic response is expected particularly in species with fast life histories or large population sizes, leaving species with slow life histories potentially at higher extinction risk. The Bechstein’s bat (Myotis bechsteinii) is a mammal of 10 g weight that - despite its small size - is characterized by a slow life history, with low reproductive output and long lifespan, and is already considered to be of high conservation concern. Past work demonstrated body size to be a highly fitness-relevant trait in Bechstein’s bats. Body size is further known to be a pivotal trait shaping the pace of life histories in numerous species. Simultaneously, many studies reported noteworthy changes in body size as a response to shifting environments across different taxa. This suggested a potential for high plasticity in this trait in Bechstein’s bats as well; however, changes in body size could have vital impacts on demographic rates.
Therefore, this dissertation investigated the following questions: firstly, what shapes the fundamental development of body size in M. bechsteinii, and, specifically, is there an impact of weather conditions on body size? If so, in what form and magnitude? Secondly, how does body size subsequently influence the pace of life in females? What is the cost of a faster or slower pace of life, and how does fitness compare across individuals with slow and fast life histories? And finally, to what extent can changes in body size be attributed to either phenotypic plasticity or genetic adaptation? What is the evolutionary potential of body size in the populations? And, consequently, what implications can we draw regarding population persistence of these colonies?
To answer these questions, we analyzed a long-term dataset of over two decades collected from four wild Bechstein’s bat colonies. We used individual-based data on survival, reproduction and body size, built multi-generational pedigrees, and combined everything with meteorological data. In Manuscript 1 we found that, in contrast to the declining body size observed in many species, body size in Bechstein’s bats increased significantly over the last decades. We demonstrated that ambient temperature was linked to the development of body size and identified a sensitive time period in the prenatal growth phase, in which body size was most susceptible to the impact of temperature. We established that warmer summers resulted in larger bats, but that these large bats had higher mortality risks throughout their lives. Manuscript 2 then revealed the influence of body size on the pace of life in Bechstein’s bats and demonstrated high plasticity in intraspecific life history strategies. Large females were characterized by a faster pace of life and shorter lifespans, but surprisingly, lifetime reproductive success remained remarkably stable across individuals with different body sizes. The acceleration of their pace of life means that larger females compensated for their reduced longevity by an earlier reproduction and higher fecundity to reach similar overall fitness. Ultimately, differences in body size resulted in changes in population growth rate via the impact of size on generation times. Results of Manuscript 3 were then able to clarify the extent to which changes in body size were founded on either phenotypic plasticity or genetic adaptation. We demonstrated a particularly low heritability in hot summers, indicating that variance in body size was mostly driven by phenotypic plasticity, with few genetic constraints. During cold summers, behavioural adaptations by reproducing bats seem to be able to mitigate negative effects of cold temperatures. These behaviours, such as social aggregation or preference for warm roosts, are, however, essentially irrelevant in hot environments. In addition, a low evolvability of forearm length points to a low capacity to respond to selection pressures associated with the trait.
We can conclude that body size in M. bechsteinii has increased over the last two decades as a response to global warming and is only slightly constrained by its genetic underpinnings. We can further demonstrate a direct link between body size and the pace of life histories in the Bechstein’s bat populations and how changes in body size impact demographic rates via this linkage. In the context of climate change and hotter summers, our findings consequently suggest that body size will likely increase further if warm summers continue to become more frequent. Whether this plastic response of body size proves to be adaptive in the long term, however, remains to be seen. While, up to this point, switching to a faster life history has been successful in compensating fitness losses, this strategy requires sufficient habitat quality and is likely risky in times when extreme weather events are becoming more frequent, as predicted by most climate change scenarios.
In times of recent climate change, mechanisms to deal with different environments (e.g. via dispersal to other habitats, or via in-situ responses such as genetic adaptation or phenotypic plasticity) are essential. In regions showing seasonality, organisms are already adapted to regular and, thus, often predictable environmental changes. One well-known strategy to survive periods of food shortage, especially during the winter, is hibernation. Although hibernation is already an adaptation to overcome unfavourable conditions, the optimal timing of hibernation to match for example food abundance peaks is likely to be influenced by changing climatic conditions, as expected during human-induced global change. Thus, the ability to respond to changes in optimal timing of hibernation can be crucial for organisms. All hibernators are positioned at the slow end of the slow-fast life history continuum. Longevity combined with a low annual reproductive output can result in slow recovery from population crashes and is expected to be associated with slow genetic adaptation. Therefore, it is assumed that phenotypic plasticity, a rather rapid and sometimes reversible process, is a crucial mechanism in long-lived organisms to adapt to changing environments. However, how differences in individual hibernation behaviour influence mortality and whether individuals are plastic with respect to their hibernation behaviour are largely unknown.
Recent studies suggest that climatic change can influence hibernation behaviour in various species differently, in a positive or negative way. Female Columbian ground squirrels (Urocitellus columbianus) delayed their emergence from hibernation with later snow melt and lower spring temperatures. Next to the environmental impact, emergence date showed a moderate heritability in female Columbian ground squirrels. Yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris) emerged earlier from hibernation with warmer spring temperatures which resulted in a longer growing period for their offspring and, therefore, higher survival rates. In contrast, in alpine marmots (Marmota marmota) lower snow cover due to higher temperatures and, thus, less isolation led to lower juvenile survival. Negative effects, such as reduced juvenile survival, would be of high concern, especially for long-lived species with a low reproductive output.
Bats are exceptionally long-lived compared to other mammals of the same size and often show a low reproductive output with one offspring per year. This is especially true in the temperate zone where bats, furthermore, are characterized by seasonality and depend on hibernation during winter period to survive food and water shortage. Because bats are of high conservation concern it is of prime importance to understand their ability to respond to different climatic conditions and associated mortality costs.
The basis of this study was a five-year data set of 1047 RFID-tagged individuals from two bat species, Natterer’s bats (Myotis nattereri) and Daubenton’s bats (Myotis daubentonii), that were automatically tracked when entering or leaving the joint hibernaculum, “Brunnen Meyer”, located in north-western Germany. The two species are similar sized, share demographical traits and often occupy the same areas. Nevertheless, they differ in their foraging strategy and activity pattern during hibernation period. Natterer’s bats are able to glean insects from surfaces, even at low temperatures. Daubenton’s bats depend on flying arthropods and, thus, warmer temperatures. And indeed there is evidence that Natterer’s bats are able to hunt during hibernation period, while in Daubenton’s bats a lack of feeding during the hibernation period is suggested. Furthermore, Natterer’s bats are characterized by a higher activity at the hibernaculum throughout the hibernation period, while Daubenton’s bats on average arrive earlier, stay inactive through the winter and leave later in spring.
In both species, the aim was to investigate the impact of their individual hibernation behaviour, precisely the timing of departure in late winter and early spring, on mortality, their adjustment of departure timing to the North Atlantic Oscillation Index (NAO), as well as differences within and between the two species from 2011 until 2015.
To later on estimate the potential mortality costs of departure timing, gaining knowledge about the seasonal survival pattern (winter vs. summer) in the two species was a first necessity. In birds, particularly small species were described as winter-regulated populations with a higher mortality during winter. In contrast, in hibernating mammal species, such as bats, a relatively lower or similar winter survival compared to summer survival was shown. In this study, the analysed data demonstrated that the winter 2010/2011 was exceptionally catastrophic in Natterer’s bats and did not impact Daubenton’s bats. When excluding this catastrophic winter in Natterer’ bats, our results revealed a stable winter-summer-survival difference (higher winter and lower summer survival) in adult Natterer’s and Daubenton’s bats, with inter-annual variation in the level of survival which indicates a potential environmental impact on survival. This winter-summer survival pattern is in line with the survival pattern shown for other hibernators. Juveniles always had a lower survival rate than adult bats in both species. Nevertheless, the extent to which the species differ between seasons and age classes was stronger in Daubenton’s bats. They always showed a slightly higher winter survival and a lower summer survival than Natterer’s bats. Together with the catastrophic winter 2010/2011 in Natterer’s bats, this indicates a species-specific sensitivity to the timing of specific weather events which is in line with their foraging strategies and activity pattern during hibernation period.
With respect to emergence behaviour from the hibernaculum, the results of this study suggest considerable differences among individuals within as well as between bat species. In comparison to Daubenton’s bats, Natterer’s bats tuned their emergence more closely to weather conditions, specifically the NAO, a large scale weather index related to winter severity, and showed individual variation in behavioural plasticity. In Daubenton’s bats only the females responded to changing conditions and left earlier in individually-experienced warmer and milder winters, comparable to Natterer’s bats females. A potential reason might be reproductive advantages for the females resulting in a longer growing period for their offspring. The shown higher winter survival in adult bats of both species indicated already higher energy expenditure outside the hibernaculum. Thus, leaving early, being active and staying outside longer by itself bore a risk (exposure risk effect). Under consideration of longer exposure times, early departing individuals had on top of that an increased risk to die. This was not given in each year, but a species- and year-specific pattern was revealed. Natterer’s bats were only significantly affected by early departure in 2011, while the remaining years show no significant additional risk of leaving early. In Daubenton’s bats, the years 2014 and 2015 were associated with a significantly higher mortality of leaving early. This is in line with the hypothesis that Daubenton’s bats might not be able to hunt for insects leaving too early and do so as a best out of a bad job. Nevertheless, the year-specific pattern suggests that early bats might profit from advantageous weather conditions during early spring.
An additional hint for an environmental impact on early bat survival in at least Daubenton’s bats is that the median proportion of night hours above 3 °C within five days after departure was included in the model with the lowest AIC. However, the effect was not strong enough to be selected as the best model and, therefore, further analyses are needed to investigate this first hint.
In conclusion, the reduced winter survival of juveniles compared to adults highlights the importance of considering age class effects in studies that investigate seasonal survival patterns. The stable species-specific winter-summer-survival difference with a higher winter survival compared to summer survival, as well as the one catastrophic winter in Natterer’s bats underline the importance of including seasonal survival patterns in assessing potential fitness costs of changed behaviour. Furthermore, our results suggest that long-lived hibernating bat species have the potential to plastically adjust to changing climatic conditions, but this potential differs between species. Among-individual differences in emergence together with species-specific mortality costs of early emergence suggest the potential for natural selection to shape hibernation phenology. In summary, our findings suggest species-, population- and group-specific differences in the ability to respond to changing environments and, therefore, underline the necessity to further investigate local responses in various organisms to estimate consequences of recent climate change on a wider range.
Recent climate change and its consequences for living organisms constitute one of the greatest problems of our century. Global warming entails an increase in mean temperature and the frequencies of extreme weather events. Those changes in environmental conditions affect both plants and animals. Because of their inability to escape from unsuitable environments, plants have evolved a wide spectrum of molecular programs to protect themselves against changing conditions. Responding on altered environmental conditions will change plants chemical composition and therefore also affect plants interaction with other species (e.g., predator-prey or symbiotic relationships). For instance, changes in the chemical composition of plants may influence the survival of associated herbivores. In other words, these herbivores will be affected indirectly by climate change due to changes in the suitability / quality of their food. The aim of this doctoral thesis was to discover the effects of climate change within the relationship of the butterfly Pieris napi and its host plant (Sinapis alba used here as host plant), including individual conditions (e.g. chemical compositions of plants; morphology, physiology of the butterfly) and behavior of female butterflies and larvae. In the first experiment, the influence of simulated climate change on the chemical composition of the plant Sinapis alba was investigated. The second experiment aimed to examine the influence of changes in plant composition on the butterfly P. napi. Glucosinolates (secondary compound of plants) are known to have an important effect on the preference and performance of herbivores. Therefore, in the third experiment, the impact of glucosinolates on the preference and performance of P. napi was investigated in order to see if these plant compounds had the most important influence on this butterfly. Furthermore, in the fourth experiment, it was explored whether there is a latitudinal gradient within the species´ responses to changes in its host plant. The fifth and last experiment aimed to examine, if there are general principles across species regarding indirect effects of climate change.
Climate change, simulated by different combinations of temperature and water regimes, had an effect on the plant chemistry. The combination of temperature and water availability changed plant composition substantially. Especially the amount of carbon and glucosinolates (here above all sinalbin) in S. alba plants varies between the different treatments and therefore between the different combinations of temperature and water regimes. Regarding glucosinolates, elevated temperatures increased their concentration in leaves, whereas water deficit in combination with higher temperature reversed this pattern. For carbon content, all plants, except those of the control group, showed a decreased amount of total carbon. However, simulated heat waves had no effect on plants, leading to the assumption that the plants were able to recover from heat stress sufficiently during the control phases. Changes in plant composition affected both larvae and females of the butterfly P. napi. Therefore, changed host-plant chemistry alters the plant quality for this herbivore, meaning that plants of different treatments represent different plant qualities defined by their composition. Females of P. napi may be able to differentiate between plant qualities and even show a direct preference. Therefore, glucosinolates seem to act as oviposition stimulants. However, preferring another plant quality with lower amount of glucosinolates suggest that females of this butterfly species were attracted by more than high levels of glucosinolates alone. Larvae fed with different plant qualities performed differently, indicated by smaller wings (lighter bodies) and prolonged development when fed with plants contained higher amount of the glucosinolate sinalbin. It can be assumed that a higher amount of sinalbin decreases the quality of the host plant and therefore lead to these responses. Probably larvae need to shift their resources from growth to detoxification and therewith survival. Furthermore, drought conditions during plant growth seem to reduce the overall negative effects of higher temperatures, lead to an increase of host plant quality. Larvae seem to benefit from feeding on these “double-stressed” plants. Comparison between the results of the preference and performance tests suggests that there might be a mismatch between female preference and larval performance. It seems that the stimulating effect of high concentration of glucosinolates, in this case sinalbin, misdirects females´ decision to less suitable host plants, meaning that the advantage of less competition for larvae come at costs through detoxification. Using Brassica napus plants with genetically fixed glucosinolate levels, it could be demonstrate that there must be other plant components influencing females´ oviposition behavior been seen in the choice experiment with S. alba. The comparison of German and Italian populations to changes in host-plant quality showed fewer differences between countries as expected. However, German and Italian individuals differed in their reaction to altered plant quality, at least in developmental time and larval growth rate. It seems that Italian larvae benefitted from plants grown under higher temperatures, whereas drought-stressed plants affected them negatively. German individuals in contrast seem to benefit only from water stress during plant growth. With regard to the sexes of P. napi, it seems that females respond differently than males to changes in plant quality. Furthermore, the results of the performance test on Bicyclus anynana showed that there might be some general principles for the respond of butterflies to changes of its host plant. B. anynana responded in a similar way to different host plant qualities as P. napi did, meaning that plants grown under higher temperatures and drought conditions seem to be beneficial for the larval performance.
In summary, these findings may have important implications for the indirect effects of climate change on this butterfly in natural environments. First, climate change seems to have an impact on the chemical composition of plants. Second, changes in plants caused by increasing temperature and droughts seem to influence the preference and performance of this butterfly. However, there are differences between populations, which seem to be induced by former adaptation. And third, there might be some general principles for the respond of butterflies to changes in their host plants. This thesis focuses only on possible indirect effects of climate change. However, there are direct effects, which may alter the responses of herbivores to changes in their host plant as well. Therefore, further investigations in this linkage and in other plant-herbivore relationships will be necessary to explore how climate change may alter the relationship between herbivores and their hosts.
Species have to cope with climate change either by migration or by adaptation and acclimatisation. Especially for long-living tree species with a low seed dispersal capacity (e.g. European beech, hereafter called beech), the in situ responses through genetic adaptation and phenotypic plasticity play an important role for their persistence. Beech, the dominant climax tree species in Central Europe, shows a high drought sensitivity and its distribution range is expected to shift northwards. On the other hand, projected northward shifts need to be taken with caution, as some studies suggest a sensitivity of beech to frost events in winter and spring. However, studies on the growth performance of cold-marginal beech populations are still rare. Previous studies on beech populations found local adaptation to drought and phenotypic plasticity in fitness-related traits as well as phenological traits. However, studies on the regeneration of beech under natural conditions are yet missing, although germination and establishment of young trees are a very first selective bottleneck and are crucial for tree population persistence and for successful range shifts.
This PhD-thesis aimed to identify the potential of plasticity and local adaptation in the important early life-history traits germination, establishment after the 1st year, and survival after the 2nd year in a reciprocal transplantation experiment at 11 sites across and even beyond the distribution range of beech (Manuscript 1). Moreover, this thesis investigated the climate sensitivity and the adaptation potential of beech populations by conducting dendroecological studies along a large climatic gradient across the distribution range (Manuscript 2) and along a strong winter temperature gradient towards the cold distribution margin in Poland (Manuscript 3). In addition, the impact of local climatic singularities was studied in a local study at the southern margin (Manuscript 4).
Warm and dry conditions limited natural regeneration, which was indicated by very low survival of young trees, even though germination rates increased with increasing temperature (Manuscript 1). This was also the case in parts of the distribution centre due to the hot and dry conditions in 2018. Although the transplantation experiment revealed high plasticity in the early life-history traits, this plasticity might thus not buffer against climate change under dry conditions. Local adaptation was not detected for any of these traits along the climatic gradient. In contrast, the results of the dendroecological study across the gradient (Manuscript 2) hint towards an adaptation potential of adult trees to drought at the southern margin. Thus, adult trees seemed to be adapted to drought at the southern margin, whereas tree growth in the distribution centre was sensitive to drought. These results indicate that parts of the centre may become ecologically marginal with increasing drought frequency in times of climate change. Interestingly, Manuscript 4 shows that beech growth was positively influenced by frequent fog immersion at the southern distribution margin in north-eastern Spain. This study underlines the importance of local climatic singularities, as they may allow marginal populations to grow in climate refugia in an otherwise unfavourable climate.
At the cold distribution margin, the study in Manuscript 1 found a remarkably higher survival of young trees in Sweden than in Poland. Moreover, the dendroecological studies revealed that beech was hampered by both drought at the cold-dry margin (Manuscript 2) and by winter cold at the cold-wet margin in Poland (Manuscript 3). All these results highlight the importance to study climate sensitivity of adult trees and the response of early life-history traits at the cold margin with a more differentiated view comparing cold-dry against the cold-wet populations and growing conditions. However, the high plasticity of the early life-history traits may allow for an increasing germination rate with climate warming at the northern margin and may thus facilitate natural regeneration there. In contrast, the dendroecological studies suggest that adult trees at the cold distribution margin may suffer either from drought or from winter cold and that the risk for spring frost may increase. Thus, the often-predicted compensation of dry-marginal population decline by a northward range expansion should be discussed more critically.
In conclusion, my PhD thesis provides new knowledge about the potential of natural regeneration and about climate sensitivity of adult trees across the distribution range of beech. Moreover, it underlines the importance to study both the young tree stages as well as adult trees to assess the performance and vulnerability of tree species under climate change, as both showed differences in their response to changing environmental conditions.
Climate change has strongly affected mountain forests through an increasing intensity and frequency of disturbances and forest dieback in recent decades. However, given the strong relevance of forest dieback and potential impacts on forest stakeholders and local inhabitants, it is surprising that this research field is seldom investigated to date. Therefore, this study deals with the perception of climate change-related consequences as well as possible silvicultural adaptation strategies for the Bavarian Forest. Since it can be assumed that various forest ecosystem services will be increasingly in demand in the future, participation by all stakeholders is essential. Therefore, a sequential, mixed-method approach (qualitative and quantitative survey) allows developing concrete guidelines and strategies for adaptive management, in which the diverse social demands on forests can be adequately taken into account.
Individual white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) growth limitations at treelines in Alaska
(2018)
White spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) is one of the most common conifers in Alaska and various treelines mark the species distribution range. Because treelines positions are driven by climate and because climate change is estimated to be strongest in northern latitudes, treeline shifts appear likely. However, species range shifts depend on various species parameters, probably most importantly on phenotypic plasticity, genetic adaptation
and dispersal. Due to their long generation cycles and their immobility, trees evolved to endure a wide variety of climatic conditions. In most locations, interannual climate variability is larger than the expected climate change until 2100. Thus treeline position is typically thought of as the integrated effect of multiple years and to lag behind gradual climate change by several decades. Past dendrochronological studies revealed that growth of white spruce in Alaska can be limited by several climatic variables, in particular water stress and low temperatures. Depending on how the intensity of climate warming, this could result in a leading range edge at treelines limited by low temperatures and trailing treelines where soil moisture is or becomes most limiting. Climate-growth correlations are the dendrochronological version of reaction norms and describe the relationship between an environmental variable and traits like tree-ring parameters (e.g. ring width, wood density, wood anatomy). These correlations can be used to explore potential effects of climate change on a target species. However, it is known that individuals differ with respect to multiple variables like size, age, microsite conditions, competition status or their genome. Such individual differences could be important because they can modulate climate-growth relationships and consequently also range shifts and growth trends. Removing individual differences by averaging tree-ring parameters of many individuals into site chronologies could be an oversimplification that might bias estimates of future white spruce performance. Population dynamics that emerge from the interactions of individuals (e.g. competition) and the range of reactions to the same environmental drivers can only be studied via individual tree analyses. Consequently, this thesis focuses on factors that might alter individual white spruce’ climate sensitivity and methods to assess such effects. In particular, the research articles included explore three topics:
1. First, clones were identified via microsatellites and high-frequency climate signals of clones were compared to that of non-clonal individuals. Clonal and non-clonal individuals showed similar high-frequency climate signals which allows to use clonal and non-clonal individuals to construct mean site chronologies. However, clones were more frequently found under the harsher environmental conditions at the treelines which could be of interest for the species survival strategy at alpine treelines and is further explored in the associated RESPONSE project A5 by David Würth.
2. In the second article, methods for the exploration and visualization of individual-tree differences in climate sensitivity are described. These methods represent a toolbox to explore causes for the variety of different climate sensitivities found in individual
trees at the same site. Though, overlaying gradients of multiple factors like temperature, tree density and/or tree height can make it difficult to attribute a single cause to the range of reaction norms (climate growth correlations).
3. Lastly, the third article attempts to disentangle the effect of age and size on climate-growth correlations. Multiple past studies found that trees of different Ages responded differently to climatic drivers. In contrast, other studies found that trees do not age like many other organisms. Age and size of a trees are roughly correlated, though there are large differences in the growth rate of trees, which can lead to smaller trees that are older than taller trees. Consequently, age is an imperfect Proxy for size and in contrast to age, size has been shown to affect wood anatomy and thus tree physiology. The article compares two tree-age methods and one tree-size method based on cumulative ring width. In line with previous research on aging and Wood anatomy, tree size appeared to be the best predictor to explain ontogenetic changes in white spruce’ climate sensitivity. In particular, tallest trees exhibited strongest correlations with water stress in previous year July. In conclusion, this thesis is about factors that can alter climate-growth relationships (reaction norms) of white spruce. The results emphasize that interactions between climate variables and other factors like tree size or competition status are important for estimates of future tree growth and potential treeline shifts. In line with previous studies on white spruce in Alaska, the results of this thesis underline the importance of water stress for white spruce.
Individuals that are taller and that have more competitors for water appear to be most susceptible to the potentially drier future climate in Alaska. While tree ring based growth trends estimates of white spruce are difficult to derive due to multiple overlaying low frequency (>10 years) signals, all investigated treeline sites showed highest growth at the treeline edge. This could indicate expanding range edges. However, a potential bottleneck for treeline advances and retreats could be seedling establishment, which should be explored in more detail in the future.
In the current era of anthropogenic climate change is the long-term survival of all organisms dependent on their ability to respond to changing environmental conditions either by (1) phenotypic plasticity, which allows species to tolerate novel conditions, (2) genetic adaptation, or (3) dispersal to more suitable habitats. The third option, dispersal, allows individuals to escape unfavorable conditions, the colonization of new areas (resulting in range shifts), and affects patterns of local adaptation. It is a complex process serving different functions and involving a variety of underlying mechanisms, but its multi-causality though has been fully appreciated in recent years only. Thus, the aim of this doctoral thesis was to disentangle the relative importance of the multiple factors relevant to dispersal in the copper butterfly Lycaena tityrus, including the individual condition (e.g. morphology, physiology, behavior) and the environmental context (e.g. habitat quality, weather). L. tityrus is a currently northward expanding species, which makes it particularly interesting to investigate traits underlying dispersal. In the first experiment, the influence of weather and sex on movement patterns under natural conditions was investigated. Using the Metatron, a unique experimental platform consisting of interconnected habitat patches, the second experiment aimed to examine the influence of environmental factors (resources, sun) on emigration propensity in experimental metapopulations. Human-induced global change (e.g. climate change, agricultural intensification) poses a substantial challenge to many herbivores due to a reduced availability or quality of feeding resources. Therefore, in the third experiment, the impact of larval and adult food stress on traits related to dispersal ability was investigated. Additionally, the effect of different ambient temperatures was tested. In the fourth experiment, core (Germany) and recently established edge (Estonia) populations were compared in order to explore variation in dispersal ability and life history traits indicative of local adaptation. Dispersal is often related to flight performance, and morphological and physiological traits, which was investigated in experiments 2-4. Butterflies were additionally subjected to behavioral experiments testing for the individual’s exploratory behavior (experiments 3 and 4).
Males and females differed substantially in morphology, with males showing traits typically associated with a better flight performance, which most likely result from selection on males for an increased flight ability to succeed in aerial combats with rivalling males and competition for females. This pattern could be verified by mobility measures under natural conditions and flight performance tests. Interestingly, although females showed traits associated with diminished flight performance, they had a higher emigration propensity than males (though in a context dependent manner). Reasons might be the capability of single mated females to found new populations, to spread their eggs over a wide range or to escape male harassment. Conditions indicative of poor habitat quality such as shade and a lack of resources promoted emigration propensity. The environmental context also affected condition and flight performance. The presence of resources increased the butterflies’ condition and flight performance. Larval and adult food stress in turn diminished flight performance, despite some reallocation of somatic resources in favor of dispersal-related traits. These detrimental effects seem to be mainly caused by reductions in body mass and storage reserves. A similar pattern was found for exploratory behavior. Furthermore, higher temperatures increased flight performance and mobility in the field, demonstrating the strong dependence of flight, and thus likely dispersal, on environmental conditions. Flight performance and exploratory behavior were positively correlated, probably indicating the existence of a dispersal syndrome. The population comparison revealed several differences between edge and core populations indicative of local adaptation and an enhanced dispersal ability in edge populations. For instance, edge populations were characterized by shorter development times, smaller size, and a higher sensitivity to high temperatures, which seem to reflect adaptations to the cooler Estonian climate and a shorter vegetation period. Moreover, Estonian individuals had an enhanced exploratory behavior, which can be advantageous in all steps of the dispersal process and may have facilitated the current range expansion.
In summary, these findings may have important implications for dispersal in natural environments, which should be considered when trying to forecast future species distributions. First, dispersal in this butterfly seems to be a highly plastic, context-dependent trait triggered largely by habitat quality rather than by individual condition. This suggests that dispersal in L. tityrus is not random, but an active process. Second, fast development and an enhanced exploratory behavior seem to facilitate the current range expansion. But third, while deteriorating habitat conditions are expected to promote dispersal, they may at the same time impair flight ability (as well as exploratory
behavior) and thereby likely dispersal rates. For a complete understanding of a complex process such as dispersal, further research is required.
Die Herausforderungen des globalen Klimawandels stehen seit mehreren Jahrzehnten auf der gesellschaftlichen und politischen Tagesordnung. Die Folgen der Erderwärmung haben das Potential, die heute bestehenden ökologischen, sozialen und wirtschaftlichen Systeme in unbekanntem Ausmaß zu stören. Ungeachtet dieser Tatsache bleibt die mediale Aufmerksamkeit auf das Thema größtenteils überschaubar. Das Ziel der Arbeit ist es, ein Bild der Tagesschau Medienagenda im Jahr 2022 zu zeichnen. Im Fokus steht hierbei die Berichterstattung über die Klimakrise im Verhältnis zu anderen sozio-ökonomischen Krisen, wie der COVID19-Krise, der Wirtschaftskrise, der Energiekrise und dem Angriffskrieg gegen die Ukraine. Zur inhaltlichen Auswertung der Tagesschau-Hauptsendung wurde eine qualitative Inhaltsanalyse durchgeführt. Über theoretische Annäherungen, wie den Agenda-Setting-Ansatz und den Framing-Ansatz, konnten Rückschlüsse über die Medienwirkung und das Verhältnis der Krisen zueinander getroffen werden. In der computerbasierten Auswertung mit MAXQDA wurde herausgestellt, dass die Klimakrise mit anderen gesellschaftsrelevanten Themen um Sendeplätze konkurriert. Vor allem der Kriegsausbruch in der Ukraine dominierte die Berichterstattung im Jahr 2022. Darüber hinaus wurde die Klimakrise in der Tagesschau vor allem als Thema politischer Konflikte geframed. Im Jahr 2022 war außerdem der Frame der Klimakrise als Teil multipler Krisen präsent. Dieser suggerierte eine Gleichwertigkeit aller aufkommenden Konflikte, welche der Klimakrise und ihren tiefgreifenden Folgen nicht gerecht wird. Um diese Rolle angemessen zu berücksichtigen, muss der Journalismus innovative Wege finden, um eine ressortübergreifende Berichterstattung des Themas zu erreichen. Nur so können die komplexen wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnisse über die Erderwärmung als Basis für die dringliche Abmilderung der Klimakrise vermittelt werden. Verschiedene Ansätze einer solchen Berichterstattung werden diskutiert.
Forests are key biomes linked to biogeochemical cycles, important species reservoirs and major ecosystem services providers. The observed global climate change in the 20th century has the potential to deeply affect the conservation, functioning and structure of these ecosystems. Expressed as rising average temperatures due to the increase in atmospheric concentration of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, nitrate oxide and methane, pollutants which are mostly product of burning fuel for industrial activities. These long-term changes will be heterogeneous in time and space throughout the globe. For northeastern Germany, predictions indicate that summer temperature and winter precipitation will be at a constant rise, whereas summer precipitation is expected to decrease, conditions will increase the risk of drought conditions. The changes in long-term means will be accompanied by increased frequency of weather extremes. The overall effect of climate change, both its long- and short-term components and their interaction with forest growth is uncertain. Tree
species in the temperate forest are highly adapted to seasonal growth, active in late-spring and summer when temperature thresholds activate primary and secondary growth as well as leaf development, given sufficient water availability. During winter, they become dormant as an strategy to decrease damage by freezing temperatures. These adaptations ultimately determine species distributions as they occur along climate gradients within their ecological
optima. Thus climate change can have a significant effect on species distribution ranges and more locally it can change species abundances. Trees being sessile organisms, possess limited dispersal capacities and rely on their adaptation potential, both genetically through selection over generations and through phenotypic plasticity (e.g. the capacity of adapting to changing conditions within a lifetime).
Tree growth can be explored by dendrochronological methods, that is, by analyzing traits of annual xylem bands as produced by the vascular cambium. These traits are width, wood anatomical properties (e.g. cell wall thickness, lumen diameter), and isotopic composition.
Tree-rings are integrators of environmental conditions and indicators of vitality and productivity of trees and forests. Studying these traits allows to understand the effect of climate on growth and physiological function over decadal to centennial scales in the past and by it inform about future growth performance. However, environmental information is not trivially extracted from tree-rings. Environmental signals in tree-rings are often the result of
complex interactions of lagged meteorological conditions and tree-scale characteristics such as size, canopy status (i.e. social status), competition and stand density, among other factors. For this reason the monitoring of secondary growth as it unfolds, for example through dendrometer monitoring (i.e. record of the stem-radial variations at intra-annual temporal scales) and repeated sampling for the study of xylogenesis, is of major importance to understand climate-growth relationships and bridge the gap between dendroecological analysis atdifferent ecological scales (from single trees to stands to populations). Therefore this thesis contains contributions a) to the understanding of long-term climate shifts and its effect on tree growth for species in the Central European temperate forests through dendrochronological assessments and contributions b) to understanding intra-annual growth dynamics and
its relationship to meteorological conditions through the analysis of monitoring records. In the retrospective analysis chapters (I-III), first an assessment was performed of the climate-growth relationships of important species of these region which indicated that deciduous species’ growth (Fagus sylvatica, Quercus robur and Q. petreae) was influenced mostly by summer water availability. For Pinus sylvestris was late spring temperature. Negative correlations between winter temperatures and growth indices of deciduous species increased over the last decades, possibly linked to less snow cover of the soil leading to root damage causing growth reductions. Scots pine presented the opposite, as positive correlations with winter temperatures became more frequent, indicating that this species’ growth rates might
benefit from an elongation of the vegetation period. Afterwards the effect of stand characteristics in the climate response was explored. The climate signal of solitary oak trees growing in northeastern Germany was compared to oaks in closed stands. Solitary trees
expressed higher growth rates and drought signals, which endanger its conservation as dry conditions are expected to increase in the region. As in the temperate forest crowding effects are variable throughout a tree’s lifetime, as well as other limiting factors (e.g. climate), we subsequently developed a methodology based on analysis of individual tree-ring series rather than chronologies (site means) to disentangle these effects on heterogeneous samples and quantify them. By sampling all present crown classes in a site near Rostock (Germany), we found beech was mostly affected by water availability in the previous summer
and this effect was well represented throughout the population. For oak the main climatic driver of growth was previous October temperature with a low representation throughout the obtained sample. For beech, the main trait governing the variability around the response to the main climate driver of growth was cambial age, and for oak was crown-projection/size. On the prospective analysis chapters (IV-VI), monitoring datasets from the years 2013-2019 were used for the analysis of meteorological forcing of dendrometer series, the effect of a multi-year drought event and for the development of a method to combine continuous dendrometer records with discrete histological observations from xylogenesis analysis. The analysis of meteorological forcing on stem-radial variations indicated all observed species (beech, oak, hornbeam in this case) respond similarly to atmospheric water content whereas
the growth phenology displayed contrasting species differences. These findings indicate high-frequency variations in stem dynamics are similar between species as it reflects transpiration and water transport in the stem, whereas the timing of growth reflects life strategies and
wood anatomical adaptations. Next we evaluated the effect of the consecutive drought years 2018-2019 using dendrometer data (beech, oak, hornbeam and sycamore maple). The increment levels after the onset of drought in 2018 were not reduced for the observed individuals, whereas in 2019 all species showed decreased growth levels, particularly beech. Most likely the water moisture reservoirs were adequately filled in winter and spring before summer 2018, which lead to increased buffer capacity to withstand the harsh conditions for radial growth. However in winter, and the spring before the summer of 2019, there was not sufficient precipitation which lead to less resistance to the second bought of the drought event.
This illustrates the complex lagged meteorological effect on radial growth, which is easily obscured in retrospective dendroecological analysis and emphasizes the pivotal role of soil moisture and soil water storage in tree-growth analysis. As a final contribution, while recognizing the importance of prospective growth monitoring, we developed a software tool to visualize and combine dendrometer stem-radial variations with images of histological events, such as those obtained by microcores for xylogenesis analysis. Growth signals in dendrometers are often of smaller magnitude than variations related to stem-water dynamics. By comparing them with histological images of wood-formation it is possible to accurately assign growth phases to dendrometer series and optimize their assessment. The advancement in methodological approaches to study intra-annual tree growth data is of major importance in the context of permanent ecological monitoring plots and its role in the assessment of the consequences of climate change on forest growth and conservation.
Overall the findings of this thesis indicate that climate change impacts in the temperate forest of Central Europe will be and have been varied depending on the species considered with stand, site and tree-level conditions strongly modulating its consequences and even direction. Deciduous species, particularly beech, will be at risk due to decreased water availability during summer for which beech shows a high sensitivity. While oak seems to
be less prone to drought related growth reductions and it is plausible to consider changes in dominance towards drier sites, it is still at risk if vulnerability thresholds are crossed. Scots pine appears to be favored by the increased temperatures during late winter, although these are naturally found on poor sites or sites either too dry or too wet for other dominant deciduous species to establish. Nevertheless, Scots pine has been planted on a variety of site conditions and especially in northeastern Germany is among the most widespread and economically important forest trees. Furthermore, the individual variability we have found in climate responses indicates that heterogeneous stands contain resilient sub-populations that
could guarantee survivorship of the species after stark changes in climate means. However, it appears that strong enough stressors such as hotter droughts can trigger wide ecosystem changes with more efficiency than shifts in climate means. Due to this intra-annual growth
monitoring is particularly relevant to foretell ecosystem changes and to understand the complex relationships found in climate-growth analysis performed in dendroecological studies, as it permits to mechanistically understand how conditions outside the tree-ring formation
period affects wood formation.
Increasing environmental changes primarily due to anthropogenic impacts, are affecting organisms all over the planet. In general, scientists distinguish between three different ways in which organisms can respond to environmental changes in their habitat: extinction, dispersal and adaptation. An example of organisms which are highly adaptable and can easily cope with new and changing environments are invasive species which are able to colonize new habitats with only few individuals. To successfully survive in their new environment, invasive species adapt fast to novel abiotic and biotic parameters, such as different temperature regimes. Phenotypic plasticity which enables organisms to quickly modify their phenotype to new environmental conditions, explains the success in adaptation of invasive species.
While underlying mechanisms of phenotypic plasticity are not fully understood, one possible “motor” of phenotypic plasticity is epigenetics. Especially DNA methylation could explain the fast changes of the organism’s phenotype due to plasticity when experiencing changing environments, as invasive species do. DNA methylation could even contribute to the adaptation of invasive species via phenotypic plasticity, especially with clonally reproducing species. Methods such as common garden experiments with clonally reproducing species are a useful tool to differentiate between phenotypic plasticity and genetic adaptation because the confusing effects of genetic variation are lowered in clonally reproducing species.
Our overall goal was to evaluate the genetic adaptive potential of New Zealand mud snail (Potamopyrgus antipodarum) populations from Europe since they went through an extreme bottleneck after colonizing Europe only 180-360 generations ago. Seemingly, two different clonal lineages colonized Europe because two 16 s rRNA and cytochrome b haplotypes were found across different European countries, haplotypes t and z. The NZMS is a highly successful invasive species that is nowadays nearly globally distributed. The shells of the NZMS show a habitat-dependent high variability and are a fitness-relevant trait. The high variability in shell morphology is due to both genetic variation and phenotypic plasticity. To disentangle genetic from environmental effects on the shell morphology NZMS, we conducted a common garden experiment. We kept asexually reproducing females from eleven European populations in climate cabinets with three different temperatures to produce offspring. We compared shell size and shape across three generations using the geometric morphometrics approach. Furthermore, we estimated reaction norms, maternal effects, broad-sense heritability, the coefficient of genetic variation (CVA) and evolvability (IA) in shell size and shape across different temperature conditions. Additionally, we investigated the reproductive rate of the parental generation.
Results showed that the shell morphology of the parental generation differed across populations. In contrast, the shell morphology of offspring generations became more similar. The reaction norms of the F1 generation were rather variable across the three temperatures. However, we were able to observe a haplotype-dependent pattern across the reaction norms suggesting a restricted genetic differentiation among NZMS in Europe. We detected high heritability values in size indicating a high genetic influence. Heritability values for shape were lower than in size. Generally, heritability varied slightly depending on temperature. Size seemed to have a higher evolvability than shape. However, the values of all our calculations were very low which indicates that the European NZMS populations are genetically diminished. The reproductive rate of the parental generation was rather haplotype than temperature dependent. In summary, we were able to display that the NZMS is capable to plastically adapt its shell morphology to different temperatures showing significant differences between the two haplotypes. Nevertheless, the low evolvability values indicate that little genetic variation has formed since the arrival of the NZMS in Europe and therefore, European NZMS seem to have a reduced ability to react to selection.
These results implied that phenotypic plasticity is important for the adaptation to different environmental conditions in the NZMS and maybe other molluscan species. Since classical experimental approaches can only describe the resulting phenotypes, we also intended to shed more light on the mechanistic side of environmentally induced phenotypic modifications using DNA methylation analysis. Although molluscs represent one of the most diverse taxa within the metazoan and are found in many different habitats, our knowledge of the DNA methylation in molluscs is scarce. Therefore, we aimed at deepening and summarizing our understanding about DNA methylation in molluscs. Publicly available molluscan genomic and transcriptomic data of all eight mollusc classes was downloaded to search for DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs 1-3) responsible for DNA methylation. Additionally, we estimated the normalized CpG dinucleotide content (CpG o/e) indicating the presence/absence and the frequency of DNA methylation in the genome. The CpG o/e ratio refers to the level of DNA methylation in the genome. Based on the sensitivity of methylated cytosines to mutate into thymine residues, species having a high germline methylation in genomic regions over evolutionary time, also have a lower CpG content, which is called CpG depletion. In contrary, species with a limited germline methylation in genomic regions over evolutionary time, show a higher CpG content and lack CpG depletion. The presence or absence of CpG depletion can be calculated with the CpG o/e ratio. Ultimately, the goal of our analyses was to gain insight into the evolution of methylation in molluscs.
We detected DNMTs in all eight mollusc classes and in most of the species. It is therefore plausible that the last common ancestor of molluscs has already had the enzymatic machinery which is needed for DNA methylation. However, various species did not possess the complete DNMT toolkit indicating evolutionary modification in DNA methylation. In general, we found a wide distribution of the bimodal CpG o/e pattern in six mollusc classes, resulting from CpG depletion. The genes in these groups seem to be divided into genes with a high degree of methylation and genes with a lower degree of methylation. This implies that DNA methylation seems to be rather common in molluscs. Species of Solenogastres and Monoplacophora were not or only sparsely methylated. It seems that those mollusc groups have undergone a reduction in DNA methylation. We hope that our investigations will demonstrate the lacking knowledge in epigenetics of molluscs and encourage scientist to execute and continue genetic studies on molluscs.