Efectos del cambio climático en la biodiversidad subterránea ibéricaestado del conocimiento y perspectivas

  1. Raquel Colado 1
  2. David Sánchez-Fernández
  3. Susana Pallarés 1
  1. 1 Universidad de Murcia
    info

    Universidad de Murcia

    Murcia, España

    ROR https://ror.org/03p3aeb86

Journal:
Ecosistemas: Revista científica y técnica de ecología y medio ambiente

ISSN: 1697-2473

Year of publication: 2024

Issue Title: Biodiversidad de los ecosistemas subterráneos

Volume: 33

Issue: 2

Type: Article

DOI: 10.7818/ECOS.2488 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openOpen access editor

More publications in: Ecosistemas: Revista científica y técnica de ecología y medio ambiente

Abstract

Subterranean ecosystems provide key ecosystem services and host an important proportion of global biodiversity, threatened by human activities and global warming. However, they have been systematically neglected in global agendas on climate change and biodiversity conservation. We conducted a systematic review of studies on the effects of climate change on subterranean biodiversity in the Iberian Peninsula, describing the variability of experimental approaches applied, habitats, taxa and responses studied, levels of biological organization, degree of specificity for the subterranean environment and factors that may interact with a temperature increase. We reviewed 15 articles that comprise a total of 135 terrestrial taxa (11 chiropters and 124 invertebrates, mainly Coleoptera). Two types of responses have been studied: thermal tolerance (through physiological experiments) in invertebrates and range shifts under different climate change scenarios (through ecological niche modelling), mainly in Chiroptera. In general, thermal physiology studies show that species with a higher degree of subterranean specialization have lower heat tolerance, and distribution models predict range contractions in the Iberian Peninsula for most of the species studied. No article has analysed behavioural, reproductive, life history or phenological responses, nor community level responses or biological interactions. This review allowed us to identify the main knowledge gaps on the effects of climate change on Iberian subterranean biodiversity and to propose priority lines on which to focus research efforts in the upcoming years.