TROPICAL ANDEAN GLACIERS
; QUELCCAYA ICE CAP
; CORDILLERA BLANCA
; PRIMARY SUCCESSION
; MOUNTAIN GLACIERS
; SPATIAL-PATTERNS
; SOIL DEVELOPMENT
; FUTURE GLACIER
; UPSLOPE SHIFTS
; CORE RECORDS
WOS学科分类:
Environmental Sciences
; Environmental Studies
WOS研究方向:
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
英文摘要:
The high tropical Andes are rapidly changing due to climate change, leading to strong biotic community, ecosystem, and landscape transformations. While a wealth of glacier, water resource, and ecosystem-related research exists, an integrated perspective on the drivers and processes of glacier, landscape, and biota dynamics is currently missing. Here, we address this gap by presenting an interdisciplinary review that analyzes past, current, and potential future evidence on climate and glacier drivenchanges in landscape, ecosystem and biota at different spatial scales. We first review documented glacier changes and landscape evolution over past decades to millennia and analyze projected future glacier shrinkage until 2100 for two case studies in the tropical Andes. The effects of climate and glacier change on high Andean biota are then examined from paleoecological research and comparative gradient analyses to chronosequence and diachronic studies of vegetation dynamics. Our analysis indicates major twenty-first century landscape transformations with important socioecological implications which can be grouped into (i) formation of new lakes and drying of existing lakes as glaciers recede, (ii) alteration of hydrological dynamics in glacier-fed streams and high Andean wetlands, resulting in community composition changes, (iii) upward shifts of species and formation of new communities in deglaciated forefronts,(iv) potential loss of wetland ecosystems, and (v) eventual loss of alpine biota. We advocate strengthening an interdisciplinary research agenda with a strong policy formulation link that enables enhanced cross-sectorial cooperation and knowledge sharing, capacity building of relevant stakeholders, and a more active participation of both government agencies and social organizations.
1.Consorcio Desarrollo Sostenible Ecorreg Andina CO, Biodivers Dept, German Aleman E12-123, Quito, Ecuador 2.Univ Amsterdam, IBED, Dept Ecosyst & Landscape Dynam, Amsterdam, Netherlands 3.Univ Amer UDLA, Grp Invest Biodiversidad Medio Ambiente & Salud B, Quito, Ecuador 4.Univ Los Andes, Fac Ciencias, Inst Ciencias Ambientales & Ecol, Merida 5101, Venezuela 5.Univ Zurich, Dept Geog, Zurich, Switzerland 6.Pontificia Univ Catolica Peru, Dept Humanidades, Lima, Peru 7.Pontificia Univ Catolica Ecuador, Lab Ecofisiol, Escuela Ciencias Biol, Quito, Ecuador 8.Jodrell Lab, Biodivers Informat & Spatial Anal, Royal Bot Gardens Kew, Richmond, England
Recommended Citation:
Cuesta, Francisco,Llambi, Luis D.,Huggel, Christian,et al. New land in the Neotropics: a review of biotic community, ecosystem, and landscape transformations in the face of climate and glacier change[J]. REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE,2019-01-01,19(6):1623-1642