Elevational homogenization of mountain parasitoids across six decades

Author:

Di Marco Moreno12ORCID,Santini Luca12ORCID,Corcos Daria3,Tschorsnig Hans-Peter4,Cerretti Pierfilippo12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology and Biotechnologies “Charles Darwin”, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome I-00185, Italy

2. Museo di Zoologia, Polo Museale Sapienza, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome I-00162, Italy

3. Istituto Comprensivo Solitati Tiburzi, Rome 00149, Italy

4. Naturkundemuseum, Stuttgart 70191, Germany

Abstract

Elevational gradients are characterized by strong environmental changes within small geographical distances, providing important insights on the response of biological communities to climate change. Mountain biodiversity is particularly sensitive to climate change, given the limited capacity to colonize new areas and the competition from upshifting lowland species. Knowledge on the impact of climate change on mountain insect communities is patchy, but elevation is known to influence parasitic interactions which control insect communities and functions within ecosystems. We analyzed a European dataset of bristle flies, a parasitoid group which regulates insect herbivory in both managed and natural ecosystems. Our dataset spans six decades and multiple elevational bands, and we found marked elevational homogenization in the host specialization of bristle fly species through time. The proportion of specialized parasitoids has increased by ca. 70% at low elevations, from 17 to 29%, and has decreased by ca. 20% at high elevations, from 48 to 37%. As a result, the strong elevational gradient in bristle fly specialization observed in the 1960s has become much flatter over time. As climate warming is predicted to accelerate, the disappearance of specialized parasitoids from high elevations might become even faster. This parasitoid homogenization can reshape the ecological function of mountain insect communities, increasing the risk of herbivory outbreak at high elevations. Our results add to the mounting evidence that symbiotic species might be especially at risk from climate change: Monitoring the effects of these changes is urgently needed to define effective conservation strategies for mountain biodiversity.

Funder

Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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